India-Poland MSME talks: bilateral trade triples, EU FTA in focus
Synopsis
Key Takeaways
Senior officials of India's Union Ministry of Micro, Small and Medium Enterprises (MSME) held a high-level bilateral meeting in New Delhi on 15 July with a Polish government delegation led by Deputy Minister Michał Baranowski of Poland's Ministry of Economic Development and Technology, to deepen cooperation across enterprise development, digital transformation, and market linkages.
India's MSME Strength on Display
Bharat Khera, Secretary of the Ministry of MSME, outlined the scale of India's small-business ecosystem during the meeting. India now has over 86 million registered MSMEs, which collectively contribute nearly 30% to the country's GDP, account for over one-third of manufacturing output, and generate close to half of India's total exports. The sector supports the livelihoods of approximately 330 million people.
Khera also briefed the Polish delegation on flagship government initiatives, including the Udyam Registration Portal, the Credit Guarantee Scheme for Micro and Small Enterprises, Technology Centres, and the Zero Defect Zero Effect (ZED) framework — all designed to build globally competitive, future-ready enterprises through digital adoption and sustainable manufacturing.
Poland: India's Largest Partner in Central and Eastern Europe
A key highlight of the discussions was the acknowledgement that Poland is India's largest trading and investment partner in Central and Eastern Europe. Bilateral trade between the two countries has reportedly grown three times since 2025 — a trajectory both sides expressed confidence in sustaining. Khera noted that the recently concluded India–European Union Free Trade Agreement is expected to further accelerate trade and investment flows, potentially elevating the bilateral relationship to a new level.
Poland's Interest in Expanding Collaboration
Deputy Minister Baranowski acknowledged India's progress in strengthening its MSME ecosystem and reaffirmed Poland's commitment to deepening institutional partnerships. He emphasised greater business-to-business engagement between enterprises of both nations. The talks also recognised the institutional cooperation initiated in 2024 between the National Small Industries Corporation (NSIC) and Poland's Polish Agency for Enterprise Development (PARP) as a foundational channel for future collaboration.
What the Meeting Aimed to Achieve
The bilateral dialogue was structured around several priority areas: enterprise development, technology and innovation, market linkages, trade facilitation, and stronger institutional ties between the two countries' MSME ecosystems. This comes amid India's broader push to internationalise its small-business sector and diversify export markets beyond traditional partners.
With the India-EU FTA now concluded and bilateral trade on an upward curve, the next steps in the India-Poland MSME partnership are likely to involve formal agreements between NSIC and PARP, and expanded sectoral working groups.