PLI Scheme Creates 3.39 Lakh Jobs, Disburses Rs 2,162 Crore in Food Processing

The Production-Linked Incentive Scheme for the Food Processing Industry has exceeded its employment target, generating approximately 3.39 lakh jobs by February 2026. It has disbursed Rs 2,162.55 crore in incentives, with beneficiaries investing Rs 9,207 crore and creating significant processing capacity. The scheme has strongly supported MSMEs and driven export growth for agricultural processed foods. A separate millet-based products PLI scheme was also launched using savings from the main program.

Key Points: PLI Scheme for Food Processing: 3.39 Lakh Jobs, Rs 2,162 Cr Disbursed

  • Created 3.39 lakh jobs
  • Disbursed Rs 2,162 crore incentives
  • Approved 165 applications
  • Exports grew at 13.23% CAGR
  • MSMEs form a significant part
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PLI scheme for food processing creates 3.39 lakh jobs, disburses Rs 2,162 crore in Incentives

Govt data shows PLI scheme for food processing surpasses job target, creates 3.39 lakh jobs, disburses Rs 2,162 crore, and boosts exports.

"surpassing its target of 2.5 lakh jobs by 2026-27 - Government Data"

New Delhi, April 21

The Production-Linked Incentive Scheme for the Food Processing Industry has generated around 3.39 lakh direct and indirect jobs by February 2026, surpassing its target of 2.5 lakh jobs by 2026-27, while disbursing incentives worth Rs 2,162.55 crore to beneficiaries since its launch, according to government data released on Tuesday.

The scheme, approved by the Union Cabinet on March 31, 2021, with an outlay of Rs 10,900 crore, is being implemented from 2021-22 to 2026-27 and aims to generate processed food output of Rs 33,494 crore.

The data stated that a total of 165 applications have been approved by the Ministry of Food Processing Industries across various categories, covering 274 project locations. Beneficiaries have reported investments amounting to Rs 9,207 crore under the scheme, while processing and preservation capacity of 34 lakh metric tonnes per annum has been created as of February 2026.

The scheme has also made significant strides in promoting smaller businesses, with 69 of the 165 approved applicants being MSMEs. An additional 40 contract manufacturing units associated with approved applicants also fall within the MSME category, indicating their integration across the value chain, data added.

The data noted that on the exports front, agricultural processed food products approved under the scheme grew at a compound annual growth rate at 13.23 per cent as of 2024-25, with reference to 2019-20. The cumulative export sales of PLISFPI beneficiaries reached Rs 89,053.44 crore during the period from April 2021 to September 2025.

The data highlight that the scheme is structured around three core components- incentivizing manufacturing of ready-to-cook and ready-to-eat foods including millet-based products, processed fruits and vegetables, marine products, and mozzarella cheese encouraging innovative and organic products of SME and supporting branding and marketing of Indian food products in global markets.

Data said that under the branding component, applicants are reimbursed 50 per cent of their overseas branding and marketing expenses, capped at 3 per cent of annual food products sales or Rs 50 crore per year, whichever is lower.

Additionally, from savings under PLISFPI, a separate Production-Linked Incentive Scheme for Millet-Based Products was carved out in FY 2022-23 with an outlay of Rs 800 crore, aimed at encouraging the use of millets in ready-to-cook and ready-to-eat products.

India's food processing sector has seen its gross value added rise from Rs 1.34 lakh crore in 2014-15 to Rs 2.24 lakh crore in 2023-24, while the share of processed food exports in total agricultural exports grew from 13.7 per cent in 2014-15 to 20.4 per cent in 2024-25, government data reported.

- ANI

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Reader Comments

P
Priya S
Great to see the scheme working for smaller businesses. 69 MSMEs approved is a good start. Hope the incentives are reaching the actual small entrepreneurs in tier-2 and tier-3 cities and not just the usual big players in metros.
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Rohit P
Rs 89,000 crore+ in export sales! This is how we build aatmanirbhar Bharat. Promoting Indian food brands globally is the need of the hour. The 50% reimbursement for overseas marketing is a game-changer for companies looking to expand.
S
Sarah B
The numbers look impressive on paper. However, I'd be keen to know the quality of these "indirect" jobs created and the actual impact on farmer incomes. Sometimes these schemes benefit processors more than the primary producers. A more balanced analysis would be helpful.
V
Vikram M
Mozzarella cheese getting incentives? 😂 Good to see diversification, but I hope the main focus remains on our traditional Indian food products. The millet scheme is a step in the right direction. Jai Jawaan, Jai Kisan!
K
Kavya N
As someone from a food processing family in Gujarat, this scheme has real impact. The support for branding has helped us explore markets in the Middle East. More such long-term policies are needed. 🙏

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