Validity of Credit Guarantee Scheme for
Microfinance Institutions (CGSMFI-2.0) Extended
Government of India has extended the validity of the
Credit Guarantee Scheme for Microfinance Institutions-2.0 (CGSMFI-2.0) until 31
August 2026, or until guarantees worth ₹20,000 crore are issued, whichever is
earlier.
Credit Guarantee Scheme for Microfinance
Institutions-2.0 (CGSMFI-2.0)
¨
Introduced by the Central
Government on 20 March 2026.
¨ Aims to provide credit
guarantee support to Banks and Financial Institutions (FIs) for loans extended
to NBFC-MFIs and MFIs for onward lending to small borrowers.
¨ The guarantee cover is
provided through the National Credit Guarantee Trustee Company Limited (NCGTC).
¨ Target Beneficiaries:
Existing and new small borrowers falling within the RBI’s regulatory definition
of microfinance.
¨ Loans are channelled
through Non-Banking Financial Company-Microfinance Institutions (NBFC-MFIs) and
Microfinance Institutions (MFIs).
Key Features:
¨
Total guarantee corpus:
₹20,000 crore.
¨ Interest rate on loans by
Member Lending Institutions (MLIs) capped at EBLR/MCLR + 2% per annum.
¨
MFIs/NBFC-MFIs must lend
to final borrowers at an interest rate at least 1% below their average lending
rate of the previous six months.
¨
Guarantee fee: 0.5% per
annum on the sanctioned amount in the first year and on the outstanding amount
thereafter.
¨
Maximum loan tenure: 3
years (1-year moratorium + 2 years repayment).
¨
Funds must be used for
the creation of fresh microfinance loan assets within three months of
disbursement.
Recent Changes:
¨ Scheme validity extended
till 31 August 2026 or issuance of guarantees worth ₹20,000 crore.
¨ Maximum loan amount for
large-sized NBFC-MFIs/MFIs increased from ₹300 crore to ₹1,000 crore, subject
to the overall ceiling of 20% of AUM.
¨
As of now, loans worth
₹770 crore have been sanctioned under the scheme.
Significance of the Scheme
¨
Enhances Credit Flow to
the Microfinance Sector: Encourages banks and financial institutions to lend to
MFIs by reducing credit risk through government-backed guarantees.
¨ Supports Financial
Inclusion: Expands access to formal credit for low-income households, small
borrowers, and underserved sections of society.
¨ Reduces Lending Risk:
Guarantee cover of up to 80% protects lenders against expected losses and
promotes greater participation in microfinance lending.
¨ Strengthens NBFC-MFIs and
MFIs: Improved access to institutional funding enhances the lending capacity of
microfinance institutions.
¨ Promotes Affordable
Credit: Interest-rate caps ensure that the benefits of lower-cost funding are
passed on to small borrowers.
¨
Boosts Rural and
Micro-Enterprise Development: Facilitates credit access for self-employed
individuals, micro-enterprises, women entrepreneurs, and rural households,
supporting livelihood generation and economic activity.
¨ Improves Scheme
Utilisation: The extension of validity and higher loan cap for large
institutions are expected to improve uptake of the scheme and accelerate
disbursement of the remaining guarantee corpus.