Assam selects 74,694 beneficiaries in CMAAA Phase 2 to boost youth entrepreneurship
Synopsis
Key Takeaways
Assam's Chief Minister's Atmanirbhar Asom Abhiyan (CMAAA) has entered its second phase with 74,694 beneficiaries selected across the state, Skill Development, Employment and Entrepreneurship Minister Bimal Borah announced in Guwahati on 18 July 2025. The scheme, designed to build a self-reliant entrepreneurial ecosystem among Assam's youth, has already disbursed a first instalment of ₹75,000 to each selected beneficiary.
Who Was Selected and How Much They Can Receive
Of the 74,694 selected candidates, 74,350 fall under the general category, while 344 are qualified professionals — including doctors, engineers, pharmacists, chartered accountants, and MBA graduates. Upon completing mandatory training and meeting the scheme's conditions, general category beneficiaries become eligible for total financial support of up to ₹2 lakh, while professionals can receive assistance of up to ₹5 lakh.
Training Underway Across All Districts
District-wise, three-day entrepreneurship training programmes are currently being conducted across Assam, with the curriculum tailored to the nature of each proposed enterprise. Aspiring agricultural entrepreneurs are being trained by the Agriculture Department, while those eyeing the handloom sector receive specialised guidance from the Handloom Department. All participants are also receiving instruction in bookkeeping, financial management, and business operations.
Minister Borah confirmed the training is scheduled to conclude by 31 July, after which the remaining tranches of financial assistance will be released to eligible beneficiaries.
Phase 1 Outcomes: A Baseline for Phase 2
The CMAAA was launched on 23 September 2023. Under its first phase, the state government selected over 25,000 general category beneficiaries and more than 200 professionals. Following the initial disbursement, roughly 100 Chief Minister's Fellows were deployed to assess fund utilisation, business progress, and the need for further handholding. Based on that evaluation, more than 12,300 entrepreneurs qualified for the next stage of financial assistance — a conversion rate that the government is now using to refine Phase 2 implementation.
Significance for Assam's Employment Landscape
The scale of Phase 2 — nearly three times the Phase 1 intake — signals a significant ramp-up in the state's push to reduce dependence on government jobs and foster private enterprise. This comes amid broader concerns about youth unemployment in the Northeast, where formal private-sector opportunities remain limited relative to the population. By routing training through specialist departments rather than a single nodal agency, the scheme attempts to ensure sector-relevant capacity building rather than generic entrepreneurship coaching.
With training set to wrap up by month-end and the final disbursements to follow, the coming weeks will be a key test of whether Phase 2 can sustain the momentum — and the conversion rates — established in Phase 1.