Ministry of Micro, Small and Medium Enterprises
Agency overview
JurisdictionGovernment of India
HeadquartersMinistry of Micro, Small and Medium Enterprises
Udyog Bhawan
Rafi Marg
New Delhi,110011
Annual budget22,138 crore (US$2.8 billion) (2023–24 est.)[1]
Ministers responsible
Websitemsme.gov.in

The Ministry of Micro, Small and Medium Enterprises is the ministry in the Government of India. It is the apex executive body for the formulation and administration of rules, regulations and laws relating to micro, small and medium enterprises in India. The Minister of Micro, Small and Medium Enterprises is Narayan Rane.

The statistics provided by the annual reports of Ministry of Small and Medium Enterprises (MSME) shows a rise in the plan amount spent on the khadi sector from ₹1942.7 million to ₹14540 million, and non-plan amounts from ₹437 million to ₹2291 million, in the period from 1994–95 to 2014–2015. The interest subsidies to khadi institutions increased from ₹96.3 million to ₹314.5 million in this period.

History

The Ministry of Small Scale Industries and Agro and Rural Industries was created in October 1999. In September 2001, the ministry was split into the Ministry of Small Scale Industries and the Ministry of Agro and Rural Industries. The President of India amended the Government of India (Allocation of Business) Rules, 1961, under the notification dated 9 May 2007. Pursuant to this amendment, they were merged into a single ministry.

The ministry was tasked with the promotion of micro and small enterprises. The Small Industries Development Organisation was under the control of the ministry, as was the National Small Industries Corporation Limited public sector undertaking).

The Small Industries Development Organisation was established in 1954. It has over 60 offices and 21 autonomous bodies under its management. These autonomous bodies include Tool Rooms, Training Institutions and Project-cum-Process Development Centres.

Services provided include:

  • Facilities for testing, toolmenting, training for entrepreneurship development
  • Preparation of project and product profiles
  • Technical and managerial consultancy
  • Assistance for exports
  • Pollution and energy audits

It also provides economic information services and advises Government in policy formulation for the promotion and development of SSIs. The field offices also work as effective links between the Central and State Governments.

Ministry of Agro and Rural Industries

The now-defunct Ministry of Agro and Rural Industries had the objectives of facilitating coordinated and focused policy formulation and effective implementation of programmes, projects, schemes, etc., for improving supply chain management, enhancing skills, upgrading technology, expanding markets and capacity building of entrepreneurs/artisans and their groups/collectives.

The Ministry deals with the khadi, village and coir industries through the Khadi and Village Industries Commission (KVIC) and the Coir Board. It coordinates implementation of two countrywide employment generation programmes, namely, the Rural Employment Generation Programme (REGP) and the Prime Minister's Rozgar Yojana (PMRY) with the cooperation of State Governments, the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) and other banks. The KVIC, established by an Act of Parliament, is a statutory organisation engaged in promotion and development of khadi and village industries for providing employment opportunities in the rural areas, thereby strengthening the rural economy. The coir industry is a labour-intensive and export-oriented industry. It uses a by-product of coconut, namely, coir husk. The Coir Board, a statutory body established under the Coir Industry Act 1953, looks after the promotion, growth and development of the coir industry, including export promotion and expansion of the domestic market.[2]

It was headed by the Minister of Agro & Rural Industries and was based at Udyog Bhavan, Rafi Marg, New Delhi. Shri Mahabir Prasad was the last incumbent.

Integrated Training Centre, Nilokheri

Integrated Training Centre, Nilokheri was an employment and training agency in Nilokheri in Karnal district in the state of Haryana owned and managed by the Government of India and responsible for upgrading technical skills of technicians.

It was built around the vocational training centre that was transferred from Kurukshetra, in July, 1948 to the 1100 acres of swampy land on the Delhi-Ambala highway as one of several enterprises intended to provide employment and training for displaced persons following the partition of India This training centre was under Small Industries belonged to subhash mukherjee Development Organisation and used to provided training to extension officers (industries of State Governments as well as managers and technician entrepreneurs both in modern small scale and traditional village industries. During the Year 1986-87 the centre trained 200 technician, 85 women under core women training programme and 57 SIDO officers.[4]

Functions

It provides technical training to artisans and workers sponsored by the state government. It also organises training of Extension Officers engaged in various developmental organisation. It provides summer training programs for Degree/Diploma Engineers.

ITC as Central Tool Room Extension Centre, Nilokheri

Due to some conflict between the Principal and Vice-Principal of Integrated Training Centre was relinquished. Later in the year 2014 the center was taken over by Ministry of Micro, Small and Medium Enterprises which led to its development as Extension center for Central Tool Room, Ludhiana i.e. Central Tool Room Extension Center, Nilokheri. Currently running various technical short term courses.

Centre structure and functions

The centre comes under the Government of India and has a Principal and a Vice Principal. The Ministry regulates:

Initiatives

Prime Minister Employment Generation Programme

It was launched as a central sector scheme in 2008–09 to promote self employment in the country through setting up micro enterprises. It is a credit linked subsidy scheme in which loans up to 25 lakh for manufacturing sector and up to 1000 Lakh for service sector is forwarded to the eligible beneficiaries for which subsidy of up to 35% is provided to them.[7]

The Khadi and Village Industries Commission is the implementing agency at the National level. The individuals who are above the age of 18 years and are at least 8th pass, self help groups, Societies registered under Societies Registration Act, 1860, Charitable trusts are all eligible to be beneficiary. Also, only new projects are considered for sanction under the scheme.[7]

Ministers of Small Scale Industries

# Portrait Name Term of office Prime Minister Political Party
1 Vasundhara Raje
(Independent Charge)
13 October 1999 29 January 2003 3 years, 108 days Atal Bihari Vajpayee Bharatiya Janata Party
2 C. P. Thakur 29 January 2003 22 May 2004 1 year, 114 days
3 Mahavir Prasad 23 May 2004 9 May 2007 2 years, 352 days Manmohan Singh Indian National Congress

Ministers of Agro and Rural Industries

# Portrait Name Term of office Prime Minister Political Party
1 Vasundhara Raje
(Independent Charge)
13 October 1999 1 September 2001 1 year, 323 days Atal Bihari Vajpayee Bharatiya Janata Party
2 Kariya Munda 1 September 2001 29 January 2003 1 year, 150 days
3 Sangh Priya Gautam 29 January 2003 22 May 2004 1 year, 114 days
3 Mahavir Prasad 23 May 2004 9 May 2007 2 years, 352 days Manmohan Singh Indian National Congress

Ministers of Micro, Small and Medium Enterprise

# Portrait Name Term of office Prime Minister Party
1 Mahavir Prasad 9 May 2007 22 May 2009 2 years, 13 days Manmohan Singh Indian National Congress
2 Dinsha Patel
(Independent Charge)
28 May 2009 19 January 2011 1 year, 236 days
3 Virbhadra Singh 19 January 2011 26 June 2012 1 year, 159 days
4 Vilasrao Deshmukh 26 June 2012 10 August 2012 49 days
5 Vayalar Ravi 10 August 2012 28 October 2012 75 days
6 K. H. Muniyappa
(Independent Charge)
28 October 2012 26 May 2014 1 year, 210 days
7 Kalraj Mishra 26 May 2014 3 September 2017 3 years, 100 days Narendra Modi Bharatiya Janata Party
8 Giriraj Singh
(Independent Charge)
3 September 2017 30 May 2019 1 year, 269 days
9 Nitin Gadkari 30 May 2019 7 July 2021 2 years, 38 days
10 Narayan Rane 7 July 2021 Incumbent 2 years, 190 days

List of ministers of state

Ministers of State For Micro, Small and Medium Enterprises
Minister of state Portrait Political party Term Years
Giriraj Singh Bharatiya Janata Party 9 November 2014 3 September 2017 2 years, 298 days
Haribhai Parthibhai Chaudhary 5 July 2016 3 September 2017 1 year, 60 days
Pratap Chandra Sarangi 30 May 2019 7 July 2021 2 years, 38 days
Bhanu Pratap Singh Verma 7 July 2021 Incumbent 2 years, 190 days

See also

References

  1. "Budget data" (PDF). www.indiabudget.gov.in. 2019. Archived from the original (PDF) on 4 March 2018. Retrieved 15 September 2018.
  2. "MINISTRY OF AGRO AND RURAL INDUSTRIES" Archived 17 January 2015 at the Wayback Machine. Retrieved on May 1, 2015
  3. "Central Tool Room, Ludhiana, Ministry of MSME, Government of India". www.ctrludhiana.com. Retrieved 14 August 2018.
  4. Entrepreneurial Development in India. Mittal Publications. 1 January 1990. ISBN 9788170991908. Retrieved 10 April 2018 via Google Books.
  5. http://www.nimsme.org/
  6. Admin Archived 5 March 2010 at the Wayback Machine Ministry of Micro, Small and Medium Enterprises website.
  7. 1 2 "Prime Minister Employment Generation Program". Ministry of Micro, Small and Medium Enterprises. Retrieved 1 September 2020.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.