Centre’s focus shifts from selling PSUs to earning more from them

ECONOMY – POLICY

1 MARCH 2026

Shift from Disinvestment to Asset Monetisation

  • Although the Union Government launched a revamped disinvestment policy in 2020, its approach has gradually shifted from selling public assets to maximising returns from them.
  • The recent launch of National Monetisation Pipeline (NMP) 2.0 signals this continued shift.

What Was the Original Policy?

  • Under the Public Sector Enterprises (PSE) Policy 2021, the government stated that it would:
  • Exit non-strategic sectors
  • Retain minimal presence in strategic sectors
  • Pursue strategic disinvestment and privatisation
  • Prime Minister Narendra Modi had said in 2021 that the government has “no business to be in business.”
  • The policy was overseen by the Department of Investment and Public Asset Management (DIPAM).

Falling Disinvestment Revenues

Disinvestment revenue trend:

  • 2022–23: ₹35,294 crore (brief surge)
  • 2023–24: ₹16,507 crore
  • 2024–25: ₹10,163 crore
  • 2025–26 (so far): ₹15,562 crore
  • The government even removed a separate “disinvestment” heading in the Budget, merging it under “Miscellaneous Capital Receipts.”
  • This means it no longer sets annual disinvestment targets.

Why the slowdown?

  • Private sector reluctance
  • Large workforce in PSUs
  • Loss-making assets
  • Limited buyer interest

Rise in Dividend Income

  • Instead of selling stakes, the government is now asking CPSEs to pay higher dividends, improve efficiency and restructure capital.
  • Dividend receipts (excluding RBI and PSU banks):
  • ₹39,750 crore (2020–21)
  • ₹74,128 crore (2024–25)
  • ₹59,730 crore (2025–26 so far)
  • This reflects a strategy of extracting value while retaining ownership.

National Monetisation Pipeline (NMP)

  • Launched in 2021, the National Monetisation Pipeline aims to:
  • Lease out brownfield public assets
  • Retain ownership
  • Asset monetisation (leasing, not selling)
  • Allow private sector to operate them
  • Raise capital for infrastructure

Targets:

  • NMP 1.0 (2021–25): ₹6 lakh crore target (90% achieved)
  • NMP 2.0 (2025–30): ₹16.72 lakh crore target

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