
PLI Schemes attract ₹1.76 trillion, create 12 lakh jobs: Govt
The schemes, spread across 14 strategic sectors, have collectively created over 1.2 million jobs as of March 2025, it said.
So far, the Centre has disbursed ₹ 21,534 crore in incentives across 12 sectors, including electronics, IT hardware, pharmaceuticals, telecom, food processing, white goods, auto components, speciality steel, textiles, and drones.
"The impact of PLI schemes has been significant across various sectors in India," the ministry said.
"These schemes have incentivized domestic manufacturing, leading to increased production, job creation and a boost in exports," it added.
Commerce and industry minister Piyush Goyal, who chaired a high-level review meeting on Wednesday, said India must prioritize sectors where it holds a natural competitive edge and work to resolve challenges faced by stakeholders to sustain export growth.
"Emphasizing that the ministries should focus on creating quality skilled manpower instead of focusing on the quantity and resolve infrastructure bottlenecks... Goyal stressed preparing a roadmap for the next five years both on investment and disbursement," the ministry added.
The pharmaceuticals sector has emerged as a standout performer, clocking cumulative sales of ₹ 2.66 trillion, including exports worth ₹ 1.70 trillion in the first three years of the scheme.
In FY25 alone, PLI-eligible products contributed ₹ 67,000 crore, around 27% of India's total pharma exports, the ministry said.
Notably, 40% of the sector's PLI-linked investments, ₹ 15,102 crore, have gone into research and development, pushing domestic value addition to 83.7%.
In bulk drugs, the PLI scheme has reversed India's trade position from a net importer in FY22 ( ₹ -1,930 crore) to a net exporter ( ₹ 2,280 crore), while narrowing the domestic demand-supply gap in critical drug components, it added.
In the food processing sector, the scheme has attracted ₹ 9,032 crore in investments, resulting in sales of ₹ 3.8 trillion and employment for over 340,000 people, the commerce ministry said.
By mandating the use of locally grown agri-produce (excluding additives and oils), the scheme has deepened rural supply chains and improved farmer incomes.
The ministry said that micro, small, and medium enterprises (MSMEs) have been a key pillar as 70 MSMEs have been direct PLI beneficiaries, while 40 more are operating as contract manufacturers, spurring innovation, expanding market access, and supporting the value chain.
Value-added marine products grew at a compound annual growth rate of 22% under the scheme and millet-based product sales skyrocketed 25 times in FY25 compared with the base year (FY21). Millet procurement rose from 4,081 million tonnes in FY23 to 16,130mt in FY25, contributing to rural income growth, the commerce ministry added.
The textiles sector has also recorded healthy export growth, with exports of man-made fibre (MMF) textiles touching $6 billion in FY25, up from $5.7 billion the previous year.
Technical textile exports rose to $3.36 billion in FY25, compared to $2.99 billion in FY24, it added.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles

Time of India
23 minutes ago
- Time of India
Hamas Vindicated? Explosive Report Junks Trump Admin's Gaza Aid Loot Claim: ‘Israel Not Weaponising'
'Looking For High-Scoring Partnership': Modi Bats For Youth, Farmers, MSMEs & Global Trade | UK FTA India and the United Kingdom have signed a historic Free Trade Agreement (FTA) that promises to double bilateral trade, unlock new markets for Indian exports, and make UK products more affordable in India. Signed by Commerce Minister Piyush Goyal and UK counterpart Jonathan Reynolds, the deal was sealed in the presence of PM Modi and UK PM Keir Starmer. Modi called the moment 'historic,' comparing India-UK ties to a cricket match played with a straight bat. From Indian textiles and engineering goods to UK whisky and medical devices, the FTA aims to benefit both nations, but especially India's youth, farmers, fishermen, and MSMEs. This deal puts India on a stronger global footing, showing that even amid turbulent global trade dynamics, Delhi is batting with vision, confidence, and purpose. Watch how India's 'Vision 2035' is turning trade into transformation.#pmmodi #narendramodi #indiaukdeal #modistarmer #modiukvisit #modistarmermeeting #modicrickettalk #cricket #modicricketanalogy #cricketanalogy #fta #indiauktarde #freetradeagreement #brexitindia #globaltrade #newchapter #indiaeconomy #ukindiarelations #modidiplomacy #keirstarmer #toi #toibharat #bharat #trending #breakingnews #indianews #toi #toibharat #bharat #trending #breakingnews #indianews 33.7K views | 22 hours ago


NDTV
33 minutes ago
- NDTV
Supreme Court Directs Delhi High Court To Hear Pleas Against 'Udaipur Files' Release
The Supreme Court on Friday directed the Delhi High Court to hear on July 28 the pleas challenging the Centre's nod to release "Udaipur Files - Kanhaiya Lal Tailor Murder." A bench of Justices Surya Kant and Joymalya Bagchi said the filmmakers appeal against the high court order staying the release was infructuous as they accepted the July 21 order of the Centre clearing the release of the film subject to six cuts in its scenes and modifications in the disclaimer. The bench said it has not expressed any opinion on merit and the high court can adjudicate the issue of stay of release of film. It asked Jamiat Ulema-i-Hind president Maulana Arshad Madani and Mohd Javed, who is an accused in the Kanhaiya Lal murder case, to move the high court against the Centre's decision. The high court on July 10 stayed the film's release on a Madani's plea, invoking powers of the Central Government under Section 6 of the Cinematograph Act, 1952, till the representation is decided by the Central Government, for which the high court granted one week time. The filmmakers claimed to have received a Central Board of Film Certification (CBFC) certificate with the board suggesting 55 cuts and the film was due to be released on July 11. Udaipur-based tailor Kanhaiya Lal was murdered in June 2022 allegedly by Mohammad Riyaz and Mohammad Ghous. The assailants later released a video claiming that the murder was in reaction to the tailor allegedly sharing a social media post in support of former BJP member Nupur Sharma following her controversial comments on Prophet Mohammed. The case was probed by the NIA and the accused were booked under the stringent Unlawful Activities Prevention Act, besides provisions under IPC. The trial is pending before the special NIA court in Jaipur.


Time of India
36 minutes ago
- Time of India
India-UK CETA unlocks $23‑billion trade corridor, set to boost MSME exports
India and the UK on July 24, 2025, signed the Comprehensive Economic and Trade Agreement (CETA) in London, marking India's 15th and one of its most wide-ranging trade pacts. The agreement, signed by Commerce Minister Piyush Goyal and UK Trade Secretary Jonathan Reynolds in the presence of Indian Prime Ministers Narendra Modi and his counterpart Keir Starmer, covers 26 areas, including tariffs, services, digital trade, intellectual property, and public procurement. It is expected to come into force within 6 to 12 months after approval by the British Parliament. The deal promises tariff elimination on a wide range of goods and unprecedented access to public procurement markets. ET Online spoke to a diverse set of industry players to gauge their sentiments on the development. With sweeping tariff cuts, procurement access, and sector-specific benefits, the India‑UK CETA is poised to deepen economic ties and provide a significant boost to MSME-led exports, believe industry observers. Explore courses from Top Institutes in Please select course: Select a Course Category Others Data Science Product Management Degree MBA Leadership others Public Policy Cybersecurity Finance Data Science Operations Management Management Data Analytics CXO Design Thinking Digital Marketing Project Management Skills you'll gain: Duration: 28 Weeks MICA CERT-MICA SBMPR Async India Starts on undefined Get Details Skills you'll gain: Duration: 9 months IIM Lucknow SEPO - IIML CHRO India Starts on undefined Get Details Skills you'll gain: Duration: 9 months IIM Lucknow SEPO - IIML CHRO India Starts on undefined Get Details Skills you'll gain: Duration: 9 months IIM Lucknow SEPO - IIML CHRO India Starts on undefined Get Details Skills you'll gain: Duration: 9 months IIM Lucknow SEPO - IIML CHRO India Starts on undefined Get Details Skills you'll gain: Duration: 28 Weeks MICA CERT-MICA SBMPR Async India Starts on undefined Get Details Skills you'll gain: Duration: 7 Months S P Jain Institute of Management and Research CERT-SPJIMR Exec Cert Prog in AI for Biz India Starts on undefined Get Details Skills you'll gain: Duration: 16 Weeks Indian School of Business CERT-ISB Transforming HR with Analytics & AI India Starts on undefined Get Details 'Tariff concessions to reshape $23‑billion goods trade' Ajay Srivastava, founder of the Global Trade Research Initiative ( GTRI ), highlighted the sweeping tariff concessions as a game-changer for bilateral trade worth $23 billion. 'In FY25, India exported $14.5 billion worth of goods to the UK. Of this, $6.5 billion, or 45%, comprising textiles, footwear, carpets, automobiles, seafood, and fresh fruits like grapes and mangoes, will now enter duty-free, compared to earlier tariffs of 4-16%,' he said. by Taboola by Taboola Sponsored Links Sponsored Links Promoted Links Promoted Links You May Like Play War Thunder now for free War Thunder Play Now Undo The remaining $8 billion of Indian exports—petroleum, pharmaceuticals, diamonds, and aircraft components—already enjoyed zero-duty access. The UK will now eliminate tariffs on all Indian goods except select agricultural items such as rice. On the flip side, India will remove tariffs on 90% of UK exports, including immediate duty cuts for salmon, lamb, aircraft parts, machinery, and electronics. Items like chocolates, soft drinks, cosmetics, and auto parts will see phased reductions over 10 years. Live Events A notable provision concerns Scotch whisky: duties will drop from 150% to 75% in the first year, ultimately reaching 40% by the tenth year. Cosmetics, perfumes, soaps, and medical devices from the UK will also see tariffs scrapped either immediately or in phases. Sensitive items such as apples, walnuts, and specific cheeses remain excluded from India's tariff concessions. Equally significant is India's decision to open central government procurement to UK suppliers, covering 40,000 high-value contracts through the Central Public Procurement Portal (CPPP) and the Government e-Marketplace (GeM). 'This access could set a precedent for future FTAs with larger economies like the EU or US, potentially eroding India's leverage in using public procurement for domestic capacity-building and employment generation,' Srivastava cautioned. A transformative development for MSMEs The Federation of Indian Micro and Small & Medium Enterprises (FISME), the largest MSME body, hailed the agreement as historic. 'This is the first FTA with a large Western economy where Indian goods faced substantial price disadvantages due to tariffs,' said Anil Bhardwaj, Secretary General of FISME . He noted that labour-intensive sectors, such as marine products, leather footwear, textiles, processed foods, electrical machinery, chemicals, and jewellery—where duties ranged from 4% to 70%—will now gain zero-duty access. 'The agreement also opens public procurement opportunities in both markets, allowing Indian MSMEs to participate in UK government tenders for the first time,' Bhardwaj added. The country's engineering sector also gave a thumbs up to the development. For India's engineering exporters, the UK remains the sixth-largest destination, recording 11.7% growth in 2024-25. Yet, according to the Engineering Export Promotion Council of India (EEPC), Indian engineering exports to the UK stand at just $4.28 billion—less than 2.2% of the UK's total engineering imports worth $193.52 billion. 'This agreement unlocks vast untapped potential,' said Pankaj Chadda, Chairman of the Engineering Export Promotion Council of India (EEPC). 'High-growth segments like electric machinery, auto components, and industrial and construction equipment are projected to expand at 12-20% CAGR. EEPC estimates engineering exports to the UK could nearly double to $7.5 billion by 2029–30,' he said, highlighting 60% of EEPC members belong to the MSME ecosystem. Similarly, the leather and footwear sector, one of India's most labour-intensive industries, sees the CETA as a 'win-win'. 'The UK has always been a strategic market for Indian footwear. This FTA enhances competitiveness and creates opportunities for investment and employment,' said Puran Dawar, Regional Chairman of the Council for Leather Exports. Currently, India's footwear industry is valued at $25 billion, with exports of $5.8 billion. The sector aims to grow to $50 billion by 2030—$14 billion in exports and $36 billion in domestic sales. Dawar added that the industry is broadening its product basket beyond leather to include sports shoes, sneakers, and safety and medical footwear and is inviting foreign direct investment from countries like Taiwan, and in these efforts, CETA will be a big catalyst. Electronics and home textiles: Competitive edge restored Electronics manufacturers also welcomed the deal. 'The UK-India trade agreement is a strong signal of trust in India's electronics manufacturing capabilities,' said Abhishek Malik, Executive Director of Calcom Vision Ltd. 'With duty-free access, Indian OEMs and EMS companies are better positioned to scale exports and expand globally.' Additionally, the home textile sector, dominated by MSMEs, is equally upbeat. 'Earlier, we faced an 8-10% duty disadvantage compared to Pakistan and Bangladesh. With tariffs gone, Indian exporters can regain market share,' said Vikas Singh Chauhan, Director of the Home Textile Exporters Welfare Association (HEWA). Leveraging the agreement, he projected a 10% rise in textile exports, particularly in bedding, linen, and décor, potentially adding 200,000-500,000 jobs over five years. Anurag Sehgal, Principal, Price Waterhouse & Co LLP, further highlighted that with the extensive scope of the FTA, it is anticipated to play out interestingly for both countries. 'It will be a game changer for Indian MSMEs, unlocking vast opportunities in textiles, leather, marine product, toys, gems and jewelry -- currently a $941 million market poised to double in three years. Commitments on mutual recognition of professional qualifications and social security, and reduced barriers in financial and IT services will benefit comparatively smaller Indian firms to scale globally with ease. This agreement not only highlights India's strategic prowess in forging comprehensive trade pacts amid global uncertainty but also serves as a blueprint for future deals, notably with the EU,' he said.