No menu items!
Monday, April 29, 2024

India’s First Solutions-Focused Report for MSME Delayed Payments Launched

Must Read

Global Alliance for Mass Entrepreneurship (GAME) and C2FO (Collaborative Cash Flow Optimization) jointly released The Delayed Payments Report 2.0 titled ‘Imagining Solutions to Unlock Working Capital for MSMEs’. This was released by the Chief Economic Advisor to the Government of India, Dr V Anantha Nageswaran.

The newly launched report is focused on addressing plausible solutions with three central pillars.

Government and Policy Makers

Finance Enablers and Financier

Large Enterprises (including PSUs).

The report aims for resolving Indian MSME’s financial crisis, as well as focus on creating an additional 10 crore jobs by 2030.

The report was co-authored by C2FO and GAME with extensive discussions and inputs from Shri BB Swain and Shri Ajeet Singh of MSME Ministry, Shri Sharad Sharma, Co-founder, iSPIRIT, Shri Vivek Malhotra, Chief General Manager, SIDBI, Shri Anil Bhardwaj, Secretary General, FISME, Shri Adarsh Kumar, Senior Agribusiness Specialist with the Food and Agriculture Global Practice, World Bank and Shri Rajesh Kumar, Managing Director & Chief Executive Officer, Transunion CIBIL.

Dr V Anantha Nageswaran, Chief Economic Advisor to the Government of India, said, “I am quite pleased with the fact that Global Alliance for Mass Entrepreneurship continues to focus on the issue of Delayed Payments that needs resolution.

This is an issue that can only be tackled over time by maintaining a constant pressure. It is also an issue that remains to be resolved not only in India, but several countries across the globe.

In the 2023-24 budget, the government has made it clear that payments to MSME suppliers cannot be claimed on an accrual basis and cannot be set off against taxable income unless the payment is actually made.

Without a vibrant MSME sector, we cannot talk of India becoming a global economic power.”

What does the report aims for?

  • The report aims to serve as evidence of lakhs of businesses not being part of the formal economy, thereby never having had access to credit.
  • The impact of delayed payments and the lack of formal financing have adversely impacted the nation’s potential to create jobs.
  • Less jobs causes raised expenses creating further hurdles in conducting business.
  • While struggling with payment delays, business owners are also pressured by non-representative and exclusive evaluation criteria limiting their access to loans.
  • The attempted efforts of the Government to introduce schemes and norms will be encourage the credit flow, strengthen cash flow-based lending by simplifying credit guarantees, strengthening TReDS by integrating GST data, and re-imagining the process of dispute resolution for delayed payments.

Ravi Venkatesan, Founder, Global Alliance for Mass Entrepreneurship (GAME), says, “Most MSMEs grapple with financial assistance, lack of mentoring support to scale the business, and technological obsolescence.

Enterprises can become efficient and create more jobs if they have access to markets, finance & technology, and strategy to be competitive. Uninterrupted cash flow is a pre-requisite, and GAME’s Delayed Payment 2.0 proposes a four-point solution to enable MSMEs to succeed, and the Indian economy continues to expand.”

Alexander Kemper, Founder & CEO, C2FO, pointed out, “Delayed payments and the lack of formal financing can adversely impact a nation’s potential to create jobs.

We have suggested solutions that leverage the India stack (Account Aggregator, GST), simplify credit guarantee schemes, and create the right incentives for buyers and sellers to remediate this crippling issue.”

You can download the entire report on https://massentrepreneurship.org/wp-content/uploads/2023/03/Delayed-Payments-Report-2.0.pdf

 

LEAVE A REPLY

Please enter your comment!
Please enter your name here

Latest News

MSME Loan Schemes 2024: Empowering Growth and Sustainability

Micro, Small, and Medium Enterprises (MSMEs) are the backbone of India's economy, contributing significantly to GDP, employment generation, and...

More Articles Like This