NSFDC schemes lift 81% of SC beneficiaries, self-employment jumps to 74%

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NSFDC schemes lift 81% of SC beneficiaries, self-employment jumps to 74%

Synopsis

An independent study of 5,480 NSFDC beneficiaries across 11 states found that concessional credit schemes transformed livelihoods at scale — self-employment jumped from 47% to 74%, 674 of 705 homemakers became entrepreneurs, and over 81% reported improved social and economic conditions. The data makes a rare, numbers-backed case for institutional credit as a tool for caste-based economic inclusion.

Key Takeaways

81.30 per cent of NSFDC beneficiaries reported improved social and economic conditions following concessional credit assistance.
Self-employment among beneficiaries rose from 46.62 per cent to 73.95 per cent ; non-agricultural self-employment climbed from 35.64 per cent to 59.42 per cent .
674 out of 705 women identified as homemakers before assistance subsequently became self-employed.
Share of beneficiaries earning below ₹1.50 lakh annually fell from 67.39 per cent to 44.74 per cent .
8.98 per cent of beneficiaries crossed the ₹3 lakh annual income threshold, indicating genuine upward mobility.
Study by DOORS covered 5,480 beneficiaries across 11 states and Union Territories for schemes from 2021 to 2024 .

The National Scheduled Castes Finance and Development Corporation (NSFDC), a Central Public Sector Enterprise, has significantly improved the socio-economic conditions of eligible Scheduled Caste persons through its concessional credit-based schemes, according to an official statement released on Monday, 13 July. A large-scale independent study found that 81.30 per cent of beneficiaries reported measurable gains in both social status and economic standing following NSFDC assistance.

Key Findings from the Study

The assessment, conducted by external agency M/s Development Oriented Operations Research and Surveys (DOORS) during FY26, covered a sample of 5,480 beneficiaries across 11 states and Union Territories. The study examined outcomes from schemes disbursed between 2021 and 2024.

Among the most significant findings, 93.34 per cent of beneficiaries utilised the financial assistance for its intended purpose — a figure the Ministry of Social Justice and Empowerment cited as evidence of the effectiveness of NSFDC's lending and monitoring mechanisms. Additionally, 93.54 per cent of beneficiaries continue to hold the assets created through NSFDC assistance, reflecting the long-term sustainability of the loans.

Income Mobility Among Beneficiaries

The study documented a marked upward shift in income levels. The proportion of beneficiaries with annual family incomes between ₹1.50 lakh and ₹3 lakh rose from 32.61 per cent to 46.28 per cent following the assistance. Simultaneously, the share of beneficiaries earning below ₹1.50 lakh annually declined sharply from 67.39 per cent to 44.74 per cent.

Notably, 8.98 per cent of beneficiaries crossed the annual family income threshold of ₹3 lakh — moving beyond the eligibility ceiling for many welfare schemes — indicating genuine upward economic mobility rather than dependency on continued support.

Self-Employment and Women's Participation

Self-employment among beneficiaries surged from 46.62 per cent to 73.95 per cent as a direct result of NSFDC assistance. The shift was particularly pronounced in non-agricultural activities, where the share rose from 35.64 per cent to 59.42 per cent, suggesting a structural diversification away from farm-linked livelihoods.

The impact on women was equally striking. Of the 705 women identified as homemakers before receiving financial assistance, 674 subsequently became self-employed — a conversion rate of over 95 per cent.

Social Status Improvement

Beyond economic metrics, the study captured shifts in perceived social standing. Over 58 per cent of respondents reported a significant improvement in their social status, while an additional 23 per cent reported moderate improvement. Combined, more than 81 per cent of beneficiaries acknowledged that NSFDC schemes contributed positively to their overall social and economic advancement.

This comes amid broader government efforts to channel institutional credit toward historically marginalised communities, with NSFDC operating as a nodal agency for concessional financing under the Ministry of Social Justice and Empowerment. The findings are expected to inform the next phase of scheme design and allocation priorities.

Point of View

And that specificity lends them credibility — but it also invites scrutiny. A 95 per cent homemaker-to-entrepreneur conversion rate is extraordinary; the study's methodology for defining 'self-employed' will determine whether that figure holds up to independent audit. More broadly, the income-band data reveals a pattern common to targeted credit schemes: the largest gains cluster in the middle bands, while the poorest cohort — those below ₹1.50 lakh — still account for nearly 45 per cent of beneficiaries post-assistance. Institutional credit clearly moves the needle, but the floor remains stubbornly low. The real policy question is whether NSFDC's next phase doubles down on the cohort that has already climbed, or redirects firepower toward those who have not yet moved.
NationPress
13 Jul 2026

Frequently Asked Questions

What is NSFDC and what do its schemes do?
The National Scheduled Castes Finance and Development Corporation (NSFDC) is a Central Public Sector Enterprise under the Ministry of Social Justice and Empowerment. It provides concessional credit-based financial assistance to eligible Scheduled Caste persons to promote entrepreneurship, self-employment, and socio-economic advancement.
What did the NSFDC impact study find?
An independent study covering 5,480 beneficiaries across 11 states and Union Territories found that 81.30 per cent reported improved social and economic conditions. Self-employment rose from 46.62 per cent to 73.95 per cent, and the share of beneficiaries earning below ₹1.50 lakh annually fell from 67.39 per cent to 44.74 per cent.
How did NSFDC schemes affect women beneficiaries?
Of 705 women identified as homemakers before receiving NSFDC financial assistance, 674 subsequently became self-employed — a conversion rate of over 95 per cent. This is cited as one of the most significant outcomes of the study.
Which agency conducted the NSFDC impact study and when?
The study was conducted by external agency M/s Development Oriented Operations Research and Surveys (DOORS) during FY26. It covered beneficiaries of NSFDC schemes disbursed between 2021 and 2024 across 11 states and Union Territories.
How many NSFDC beneficiaries crossed the ₹3 lakh annual income threshold?
According to the study, 8.98 per cent of NSFDC beneficiaries crossed the annual family income threshold of ₹3 lakh following assistance — moving beyond the eligibility ceiling for many welfare programmes and indicating genuine upward economic mobility.
Nation Press
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