Scaling Self-Help Group Enterprises: Socio-Economic, Financial,
and Market Barriers
(Published in The Business Sandesh 01 November 2025)
By Dinesh K Kapila. CGM (Retd) NABARD.
“Our object in the construction of the state is the greatest
happiness of the whole, and not that of any one class.” In this quote, Plato
asserts that the primary goal in forming a just state is to
ensure the overall well-being and happiness of the
entire society. This is essential to absorb when we discuss the empowerment of
SHGs.
The
transition of members of Self-Help Groups (SHGs) from participation in savings
and micro-livelihood activities to becoming resilient, scalable entrepreneurs
represents a critical step for inclusive economic growth and poverty
alleviation. This is the next frontier, the next challenge. My recent interactions with the SACC India
StartUp Accelerator Chamber of Commerce for their Udaan Programme, a programme
that assists women in turning their
skills and ideas into successful businesses brought this into focus. They are coordinating
with a major foundation to support and nurture women through multiple guidance
points for evolving as self reliant and self confident entrepreneurs.
Observations
over a period of time do indicate that the SHG movement has successfully
established effective conduits for
credit delivery and fostered social capital , however a complex array of
interlocking barriers prevents entrepreneurial graduation. One major policy
thought before we assess further is the question, can a significant percentage
of SHGs or their members really evolve as entrepreneurs. Discounting this
concern, the primary constraints are deeply rooted in socio-cultural norms,
with family responsibilities and social restrictions ranking as the highest
obstacle. These are compounded by deficits in business capacity, low awareness
of high-value government schemes, difficulty in accessing growth capital beyond
micro-loans, and pervasive market access and quality control deficiencies. As
one facilitator stated, a group focused on Indian sweets faltered on quality,
as the scale increased, the quantities to be exactly used as inputs, maintaining
the same taste and texture day after day and in developing a mindset of
adhering to a rigourous data centric units of measurement of ingredients
approach were pain points.
To
address these systemic hurdles, a cohesive, coordinated multi-stakeholder
strategy is required, focusing on an ecosystem-led Initiative. Could the emphasizing
of tailored financial products for scaling, sector-specific managerial
training, robust value chain integration, the creation of a customized legal
structure for nano enterprises, and targeted interventions for socio-cultural
empowerment to enhance confidence and mitigate the domestic workload barrier
work. Maybe, but it would require major coordinated mechanisms.
SHGs are designed to empower marginalized communities, primarily
women in rural areas. Their success lies in enhancing access to financial
resources, fostering collective action, and building essential social capital
among members. This collective structure has allowed members to structure a Group
Corpus, available for their financial needs. This sustained flow of credit has successfully
nurtured a substantial number of women-led micro enterprises, underscoring the
intrinsic entrepreneurial drive of rural women. The achievement is evident not only through quantitative metrics like
savings and income levels but also by qualitative indicators such as financial
stability and enhanced member
empowerment. Despite the successes in poverty alleviation and financial
inclusion, concerns do exist regarding
the long-term viability of SHGs particularly when external funding and support
systems are eventually withdrawn.
The initial thrust of policy makers was facilitating access to
hassle free credit. And satisfying consumption driven needs. That now has
graduated to shifting members from engaging in basic, subsistence-level
micro-livelihood activities to establishing self-sustaining, viable micro,
small, and medium enterprises (MSMEs). This critical transition, going
entrepreneurial is complex. It requires the members of SHGs to overcome
significant hurdles, including limited access to crucial technical expertise,
advanced managerial guidance, and sophisticated marketing support.
Globally, the disparity is stark: women in developing countries
demonstrate double the aspiration rate toward entrepreneurship compared to
those in high-income countries (35% aspire versus 14%). Yet, these women
founders—who tend to be younger, poorer, and less educated—lag significantly
behind their male counterparts and women in higher-income countries in their
ability to transform these aspirations into resilient, growing businesses.
Unlocking
this potential is recognized as critical for economic empowerment, boosting
overall economic growth, and creating more equitable societies. We need to
overcome the barriers to entrepreneurship and yet understand the competitive
markets in which the SHGs have to operate. The MSMEs and even major corporates
have introduced varied products along the entire range of the price points,
with packaging, that in itself is a reference point in competitiveness to
address.
The
barriers preventing SHG members from successfully scaling their enterprises are
interconnected and multifaceted, stemming from socio-cultural foundations,
financial access gaps, and capacity deficiencies. Empirical analysis highlights
that the most significant constraints are not purely financial but relate to
time deficits and social acceptance. Often family responsibilities and social constraints limiting business
activities are primarily identified
as major challenges. Social
constraints often impose limitations on mobility, preventing women from
interacting freely with suppliers, accessing broader markets, or receiving
external training. I personally had an experience, where though we deputed a
lady officer, the men of the village combined in not allowing women to attend a
training in another city.
This lack of external and family support fuels internal
psychological barriers, even leading to low
confidence in making independent business decisions or taking risks. We have to
address these restrictive social norms and cultivating
spousal and family support is a prerequisite for realizing the benefits of
financial investment and business training. As is observed, If the foundation
of social capital and personal empowerment is weak, the acquired skills and
capital are often underutilized. Furthermore, structural limitations regarding
asset ownership mean women frequently lack collateral, making them dependent on
the group-based lending model. While effective for micro-credit, this
dependency can inhibit the pursuit of larger, individual-level scaling
opportunities. Focusing on nurturing a few women ready to evolve as
entrepreneurs often leads to the pull factor.
The SHG-BLP has the challenge to move to enterprise scaling. Data
suggests that a substantial portion of enterprises continue to source funds
either through their corpus or through informal sources. Borrowing from MFIs is
costly and the loan quantum per group or member remains low. The barriers are
not solely legal or collateral-based, but could be complex rules, limited
awareness of the higher loan limits or a lack of confidence is availing them,
the hesitation of banks regarding larger group-based loans, or the SHGs' own
limited capacity to prepare the necessary documentation, such as a robust Micro
Credit Plan. Other factors are the lack
of essential business and financial literacy, including pricing, marketing, and
accurate bookkeeping skills. Without these foundational skills, enterprises
cannot achieve operational efficiency or sustain financial stability. Limited
experience in management and the conflict between consumption and micro
enterprise and a major investment are a barrier too.
The lack of exposure to the marketing and production chain, such
as, a lack of knowledge regarding modern marketing techniques, non-existent or
inadequate access to distribution channels, the absence of effective marketing
and branding practices, and inadequate production facilities and quality
control measures are barriers I have myself observed. Quality concerns are
endemic. The maintaining of a standard
quality of products is non-negotiable and forms a key pillar of developing a
market.
One
suggestion is for the Bank Sakhis to be more effective as an intermediate
support system. They can assist with loan applications and the required
documentation and reinforce community-based recovery mechanisms. Maybe the
banks and other financial institutions could develop intermediate loan products
for group enterprises and individuals that are demonstrating viability. A
strategic linkage to the existing, larger entrepreneurship schemes is also
vital such as the PMMY, PMEGP, PMFME etc,. Capacity Building is essential in
parallel. Capacity building has to be for managerial and commercial competence
and domain expertise. Training programmes have to be targeted, sector-specific, and hands-on and include digital literacy.
A
diversified distribution strategy is essential for maximizing outreach and
stability. The Government can facilitate and CSR Arms may enable integrating
into existing Corporate Value Chains.
Mentors at the block level would be ideal for this drive. Consistently
reaching the last mile is a challenge the Govt or CSR arms must facilitate.
Considering the competitive scenario, some private sector mentors suggest a
narrower focus on Beauty parlours, body care, care givers, lifestyle products, food
processing, tiffin delivery etc.
Meanwhile, the capacity building by NABARD for onboarding onto E-Commerce
platforms, support for the physical marketing of products, the money purse
initiative and the graduated rural income generation project and the rural
marts are certainly sound and can be considered by CSR Arms.
Some observors suggest distinct legal and regulatory policies for
nano enterprises. Setting up self sustaining federations is another mechanism
but we need to evolve along the process of marketing to reach there.
Ultimately, a strategic commitment across all stakeholders is required.
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Resonate your thoughts. It's said that women entrepreneurs can change the fabric of the country with GDP growth, uplifting the family wellbeing and making choices for themselves & their children. Great effort by the NGOs
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