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From Borrowers to Builders: Women’s Role in India’s Financial Growth Story

Kartavya Desk Staff

Syllabus: Women

Source: Niti Aayog

Context: NITI Aayog launched the report “From Borrowers to Builders: Women’s Role in India’s Financial Growth Story” highlighting increased financial participation of women.

• The report, published by TransUnion CIBIL, Women Entrepreneurship Platform (WEP), and MicroSave Consulting (MSC), shows a 42% rise in women monitoring their credit as of December 2024.

About Findings on Women and Financial Growth:

Increased Credit Participation:

Women borrowers tripled between 2019 and 2024.

60% of women borrowers are from semi-urban and rural areas.

Women’s share in business loans increased by 14%, and in gold loans by 6% since 2019.

Rise in Credit Monitoring & Awareness:

27 million women monitored their credit in 2024, a 42% increase from 2023.

More women in non-metro regions (48%) are actively monitoring credit than in metro areas (30%).

62% of self-monitoring women fall into prime or above credit bands, improving credit health.

Regional Credit Participation:

Southern states lead in financial inclusion, with Tamil Nadu, Karnataka, and Telangana having the highest women borrowers.

Northern & central states (UP, Rajasthan, MP) saw the fastest growth in live women borrowers in the past five years.

Success of Financial Inclusion for Women:

Women Entrepreneurship Platform (WEP): Provides mentorship, market access, and financial literacy.

Financing Women Collaborative (FWC): Promotes gender-intelligent financial products and public-private partnerships.

Pradhan Mantri Mudra Yojana (PMMY): ₹2.22 lakh crore in loans disbursed to 4.24 crore women entrepreneurs in FY 2023-24.

PM SVANidhi Yojana: ₹5,939.7 crore disbursed to 30.6 lakh women street vendors by Dec 2024.

Udyam Registration: 40% of MSMEs in India are now women-owned.

Challenges Faced by Women in Financial Access:

Credit Aversion: Fear of loan repayment and financial instability.

Collateral & Guarantor Issues: 79% of women-owned businesses are self-financed, with limited access to formal credit.

Poor Banking Experience: Women face bureaucratic hurdles and lack advisory support in financial institutions.

Limited Financial Products for Women: Rigid loan structures do not cater to women’s unique financial needs.

Lack of Credit Readiness: 30% of individual women entrepreneurs lack required documentation and financial records.

Way Ahead:

Reimagining Credit Risk Assessment: Using AI, big data, and alternative scoring models to reduce gender bias.

Gender-Intelligent Financial Products: Offering flexible repayment terms, non-collateral loans, and tailored services.

Boosting Credit Readiness: Promoting digital transactions, bookkeeping, and financial literacy to increase loan accessibility.

Strengthening Support Ecosystem: Expanding WEP and FWC networks to provide mentorship, networking, and access to capital.

Increasing Gender Representation in Finance: Encouraging more women in financial decision-making roles to design inclusive products.

Conclusion:

Women are transitioning from borrowers to economic builders, leveraging financial tools for business growth and financial independence. While credit awareness and participation are rising, gender-based financial barriers persist. Addressing these challenges through inclusive policies, AI-driven credit assessments, and targeted financial products will unlock women’s full economic potential, driving India’s financial growth and gender equity.

• Is inclusive growth possible under market economy? State the significance of financial inclusion in achieving economic growth in India. (UPSC-2022)

AI-assisted content, editorially reviewed by Kartavya Desk Staff.

About Kartavya Desk Staff

Articles in our archive published before our editorial team was expanded. Legacy content is periodically reviewed and updated by our current editors.

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