PSL reforms needed for Viksit Bharat 2047: SBI Research report

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PSL reforms needed for Viksit Bharat 2047: SBI Research report

Synopsis

SBI Research is pushing for the most sweeping overhaul of India's Priority Sector Lending framework since its 1972 inception — proposing new categories for ESG, EVs, and climate finance, and sharply higher loan limits for housing, education, and renewables. The argument: banks are hitting aggregate PSL targets, but the framework itself is misaligned with where India needs to grow by 2047.

Key Takeaways

SBI Research has called for a comprehensive expansion of the Priority Sector Lending (PSL) framework to align with Viksit Bharat@2047 goals.
Proposed new PSL categories include ESG Financing , SDG Commitment , Infrastructure Lending , and EV Ecosystem Financing .
Renewable energy loan limits recommended to rise from ₹35 lakh to ₹1 crore ; education loans from ₹25 lakh to ₹50 lakh .
Home loan PSL limits proposed at ₹1 crore for metros and ₹75 lakh elsewhere.
Banks currently exceed the 40% overall PSL target, with provisional FY26 estimates at 45% of Adjusted Net Bank Credit.
The RBI established the PSL mechanism in 1972 ; the report calls for its most wide-ranging revision to date.

SBI Research has called for a comprehensive overhaul of India's Priority Sector Lending (PSL) framework, arguing that existing limits and categories must be expanded to align credit flows with the country's Viksit Bharat@2047 development goals. The report, released on 7 July, warns that the current PSL architecture — designed in a different economic era — is inadequate to channel funds toward emerging priorities such as green energy, electric vehicles, and social infrastructure.

Key Recommendations

The report proposes raising the renewable energy loan limit from ₹35 lakh to ₹1 crore; home loan limits to ₹1 crore in metro centres and ₹75 lakh elsewhere, with intermediated housing loans brought under PSL coverage. It also recommends doubling the education loan cap from ₹25 lakh to ₹50 lakh, and raising social infrastructure loans to ₹25 crore across all cities.

For bank loans to Non-Banking Financial Companies (NBFCs) for on-lending, the report suggests raising limits to ₹25 lakh per borrower for agriculture and ₹50 lakh for other sectors.

New Categories Proposed

Beyond revising existing limits, SBI Research has urged the creation of entirely new PSL heads. These include ESG Financing, SDG Commitment, Infrastructure Lending, and Financing to the EV Ecosystem. The report specifically recommends a dedicated category called 'Climate Sustainability Finance' for activities contributing to environmental sustainability.

'Investments in green bonds/ESG bonds/sovereign bonds, etc. may be permitted for PSL classification,' the report stated.

Infrastructure and Government Scheme Loans

On infrastructure, the report recommended that all infrastructure loans be either granted priority sector status or exempted from the calculation of Adjusted Net Bank Credit (ANBC) for PSL achievement — consistent with the treatment of infrastructure bonds raised for funding infrastructure and affordable housing.

It also urged that loans under all government-sponsored schemes be classified as Micro Enterprises and weaker sections, regardless of whether borrowers possess a Udyam Registration Number (URN).

Current PSL Performance and the Case for Reform

Banks are broadly meeting the overall 40% PSL target — provisional estimates for FY26 indicate overall PSL at approximately 45% of Adjusted Net Bank Credit. However, SBI Research argues that mere compliance with aggregate targets masks gaps in emerging sectors that are central to long-term growth.

The Reserve Bank of India (RBI) first devised the PSL mechanism in 1972 to direct credit toward underserved sectors, and it has been revised periodically since. This report represents the most wide-ranging call for reform in recent years, connecting PSL's evolution directly to India's 2047 centenary development vision. With climate commitments, EV adoption, and digital infrastructure all accelerating, a structural update to PSL could determine whether formal banking keeps pace with the economy's transformation.

Point of View

But the harder question is enforcement: new categories without sub-targets and monitoring mechanisms risk becoming accounting entries rather than actual credit flows. The RBI's periodic revisions since 1972 have consistently lagged economic reality; the 2047 deadline makes the cost of another slow revision cycle much higher.
NationPress
7 Jul 2026

Frequently Asked Questions

What is Priority Sector Lending and why does it need reform?
Priority Sector Lending (PSL) is a Reserve Bank of India mechanism, established in 1972, that requires banks to direct a mandated share of credit — currently 40% of Adjusted Net Bank Credit — toward specified underserved sectors such as agriculture, small businesses, and housing. SBI Research argues the framework needs reform because it does not yet cover emerging priorities like EV financing, ESG lending, and climate sustainability finance that are central to India's Viksit Bharat 2047 vision.
What new PSL categories has SBI Research proposed?
SBI Research has proposed adding ESG Financing, SDG Commitment, Infrastructure Lending, and EV Ecosystem Financing as new PSL categories. It has also recommended a dedicated 'Climate Sustainability Finance' head, with green bonds, ESG bonds, and sovereign bonds eligible for PSL classification.
What changes to loan limits are being recommended?
The report recommends raising the renewable energy loan limit from ₹35 lakh to ₹1 crore, education loans from ₹25 lakh to ₹50 lakh, home loans to ₹1 crore in metro centres and ₹75 lakh elsewhere, and social infrastructure loans to ₹25 crore across all cities. NBFC on-lending limits are proposed at ₹25 lakh per borrower for agriculture and ₹50 lakh for other sectors.
Are Indian banks currently meeting PSL targets?
Yes, banks are broadly meeting the overall 40% PSL target. Provisional FY26 estimates indicate overall PSL at approximately 45% of Adjusted Net Bank Credit. However, SBI Research argues that aggregate compliance masks gaps in newer, high-growth sectors that are not yet covered by the framework.
How does this connect to the Viksit Bharat 2047 goal?
Viksit Bharat 2047 is India's centenary development vision targeting a fully developed economy by the country's 100th year of independence. SBI Research contends that without updating PSL to cover climate, infrastructure, and digital priorities, formal bank credit will remain misaligned with the structural investments needed to achieve that target.
Nation Press
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