Women Drive India's Credit Boom, Moving Beyond Small Loans to Business Lending

A new NITI Aayog report highlights a major transformation in India's credit market, driven by women. Women borrowers now hold a credit portfolio of Rs 76 lakh crore, a nearly five-fold increase since 2017. They are increasingly moving beyond basic loans into retail and business-purpose lending, indicating stronger financial integration. The growth is fueled by expanded digital public infrastructure and formal financial systems.

Key Points: Women Fuel India's Credit Growth, NITI Aayog Report Reveals

  • Women's credit portfolio hits Rs 76 lakh crore
  • Growth driven by digital infrastructure
  • Shift from entry-level to business loans
  • Active women borrowers grew at 9% CAGR
  • Report combines bureau data with entrepreneur insights
2 min read

Women move beyond basic loans, drive India's credit growth: NITI Aayog CEO

Women now hold Rs 76 lakh crore in credit, driving India's market. A new NITI Aayog report details their shift from basic loans to business lending.

"Economic development advances when participation in markets becomes broader, deeper and more efficient. - Nidhi Chhibber"

New Delhi, April 8

Women in India are no longer just accessing small loans -- they are now actively shaping the country's credit market by moving into retail and business lending, NITI Aayog CEO Nidhi Chhibber said.

A new report released by NITI Aayog highlighted a major shift in how women engage with the formal credit system.

Titled "From Borrowers to Builders: Women and India's Evolving Credit Market", the report showed that women are increasingly benefiting from the expansion of digital public infrastructure and formal financial systems.

Speaking at the launch, Chhibber said that economic growth improves when more people participate efficiently in markets.

"Economic development advances when participation in markets becomes broader, deeper and more efficient," she said.

She added that the findings of this report reflect how women are increasingly shaping and benefitting from these shifts.

"Importantly, women borrowers are moving beyond entry-level credit towards retail and business-purpose lending, indicating strengthening financial capability and deeper economic integration," Chhibber explained.

The report revealed that women borrowers in India currently hold a credit portfolio of Rs 76 lakh crore, accounting for 26 per cent of the total system credit.

This marks a sharp rise from Rs 16 lakh crore in 2017, with overall credit exposure growing 4.8 times during this period.

The number of women actively using credit has also grown steadily, with a compound annual growth rate of 9 per cent between 2017 and 2025.

Prepared under the Women Entrepreneurship Platform of NITI Aayog in collaboration with TransUnion CIBIL and MicroSave Consulting, the report provided a detailed look at how women are progressing within the credit ecosystem.

It combines large-scale credit bureau data with insights from rural women entrepreneurs.

Anna Roy, who also leads the Women Entrepreneurship Platform, said the increasing scale and diversity of women's credit use signal a meaningful transformation in India's economy.

- IANS

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Reader Comments

R
Rohit P
Rs 76 lakh crore portfolio! That's a staggering number. It shows women are not just managing household budgets but are major economic players. Hope this trend continues and we see more women-led MSMEs getting easier credit.
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Anjali F
While the growth is impressive, I hope this isn't just urban data. The real test is whether women in tier-3 cities and villages have the same access to business loans without excessive paperwork or needing male co-signers.
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David E
As someone working in fintech, the 9% CAGR in active women borrowers is a key metric investors look at. India's financial inclusion story, powered by women entrepreneurs, is becoming a global case study.
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Karthik V
From 'stitch and save' groups to managing crore-plus business loans – what a journey! This is true women-led development. Banks should now create more tailored products for women in manufacturing and tech, not just retail.
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Sneha F
My sister just got a loan for her organic farm startup without any collateral, purely based on her credit score. A few years ago, this was unthinkable. More power to all the women building the economy! 💪

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