The PLI Scheme
Production-Linked
Incentives
The Production-Linked Incentive (PLI) scheme is the flagship tool of Atmanirbhar Bharat — paying companies a 4-6% cash incentive on extra goods made in India, across 14 strategic sectors. It has drawn over ₹2.16 lakh crore in investment and created 14+ lakh jobs, but faces real questions about value addition and jobs.
The Production-Linked Incentive (PLI) scheme is the primary policy instrument of the Atmanirbhar Bharat strategy — designed to attract large-scale investment and technology into 14 strategic sectors. It marks a shift from old input-based subsidies to performance-linked rewards. This guide simplifies how it works, its sector-wise wins, the criticisms, and the latest data.
The genius of PLI is also its risk: by paying for output, it guarantees results — but only the results you measure. If you reward assembly, you get assembly. The next test is whether India can use PLI to make the components, not just snap them together. — Legacy IAS Faculty
What is the PLI Scheme?
PLI offers a fiscal incentive — typically 4-6% — on the incremental sales of goods manufactured domestically. In other words, the government pays companies a small percentage on the extra output they produce in India above a base year, for a fixed number of years.
Suppose a company made ₹100 crore of phones in the base year. Next year it makes ₹150 crore — that’s ₹50 crore of incremental (extra) production. At a 5% PLI rate, the government pays it ₹2.5 crore as a reward. The catch: no extra production, no incentive. This “pay-for-performance” design is why PLI differs from old open-ended subsidies — you only get paid if you actually deliver.
PLI — Key Achievements
As of August 2024, the headline numbers were already striking:
Those August 2024 figures have since scaled up sharply. By December 2025, PLI had drawn ₹2.16 lakh crore in realised investment, generated incremental production of ₹20.41 lakh crore, and created roughly 14.39 lakh jobs — with 806 applications approved across the 14 sectors (including 176 MSMEs). However, incentive disbursal remains slow (around ₹28,748 crore paid out against a ~₹1.97 lakh crore outlay) — confirming the “under-utilisation” criticism.
Sector-Specific Successes
Electronics
The standout success. Mobile production rose from ₹18,000 cr (FY15) to ₹5.45 lakh cr (FY25) — ~28-fold — making India a net exporter.
Pharma & Bulk Drugs
India is among the top global players in pharma; ~50% of production is exported, and import reliance (e.g., Penicillin G) has fallen.
Automotive
Attracted US$8.15 billion in investment, with over 115 companies applying — strengthening India’s global position.
Solar PV
Aims to build 65 GW of manufacturing capacity with ~US$2.35 billion, driving the clean-energy push.
Telecom
Achieved 60% import substitution, turning India into a major exporter of 4G and 5G equipment.
Drones
Drone turnover jumped seven-fold under PLI, making India a global leader in drone manufacturing.
Persistent Challenges
Under-Utilisation of Funds
Slow disbursal of incentives points to implementation bottlenecks — far less has been paid out than the total outlay.
Muted Sectors
High-efficiency solar modules, ACC batteries, textiles, and specialty steel have drawn a weak investor response.
Capital-Intensive Bias
A heavy tilt toward capital-intensive industries — continuing the neglect of job-rich, labour-intensive sectors like textiles, leather, and footwear.
Expert Opinion — A Word of Caution
Two leading economists have flagged important caveats about PLI:
Dr. Raghuram Rajan (former RBI Governor) has cautioned that PLI risks becoming a form of protectionism — boosting mere assembly without significant domestic value addition.
Arvind Panagariya (Chairman, 16th Finance Commission) has argued that the scheme should be highly selective and time-bound, to avoid creating long-term dependence on subsidies.
To directly tackle the “assembly without value addition” criticism, the government launched the Electronics Components Manufacturing Scheme (ECMS) in 2025 — its outlay enhanced to ₹40,000 crore in Budget 2026-27. It targets the deeper parts of the supply chain (PCBs, camera modules, connectors, sub-assemblies). By early 2026, ~75 applications had been approved across 12 states, with ~₹61,671 crore of expected investment and ~65,040 jobs — many via technology tie-ups with Korean, Taiwanese, and Japanese firms. Alongside the India Semiconductor Mission (Micron’s Sanand plant operational; Tata’s Dholera fab), this is India’s push to move from “Assembled in India” to genuinely “Made in India” — and to capture China + 1 supply-chain shifts.
Key Terms Explained
| Term | What It Means (Simply) |
|---|---|
| Incremental Sales | Sales/production above a base-year level. PLI rewards only the extra output, not the total — so firms must actually grow to earn the incentive. |
| Import Substitution | Making at home what was earlier imported — reducing dependence on foreign suppliers (e.g., telecom gear, bulk drugs). |
| Domestic Value Addition | The share of a product’s value actually created in India rather than imported. High value addition = we make the costly parts, not just assemble them. |
| ACC Battery | Advanced Chemistry Cell — next-generation, high-energy battery cells used in EVs and grid storage; a strategic PLI sector that has seen a muted response. |
| Bulk Drug / API | The Active Pharmaceutical Ingredient — the core chemical that actually treats a disease (e.g., Penicillin G). India had grown over-dependent on Chinese imports for these. |
| Protectionism | Shielding domestic industry from foreign competition (via tariffs/subsidies). Helpful initially, but can breed inefficiency if it lasts too long — Rajan’s concern. |
| Capital- vs Labour-Intensive | Capital-intensive industries need lots of machines/money (e.g., chips); labour-intensive ones need lots of workers (e.g., garments). The jobs case favours the latter. |
Probable Prelims MCQs (Application-Based)
Q1. The Production-Linked Incentive (PLI) scheme provides incentives based on:
(b) Incremental sales of goods manufactured domestically
(c) The number of employees hired
(d) The value of imports made by a firm
Show Answer
Q2. Consider the following criticisms of the PLI scheme:
2. A bias toward capital-intensive over labour-intensive sectors.
3. Risk of rewarding assembly without deep domestic value addition.
(b) 2 and 3 only
(c) 1 and 3 only
(d) 1, 2 and 3
Show Answer
Q3. The Electronics Components Manufacturing Scheme (ECMS), launched recently, primarily aims to:
(b) Deepen the domestic component & supply-chain ecosystem
(c) Provide free electricity to factories
(d) Replace the PLI scheme entirely
Show Answer
Q4. In the pharmaceutical context, an “API” or “bulk drug” refers to:
(b) The active ingredient that produces the therapeutic effect
(c) The brand name of a drug
(d) The retail price of a medicine
Show Answer
Mains Questions — Probable
Q1 (Probable, 15 marks). “The Production-Linked Incentive scheme has delivered visible gains but faces structural criticisms.” Critically evaluate the scheme’s performance and suggest reforms.
Show Approach
Q2 (Probable, 10 marks). Distinguish between input-based subsidies and performance-linked incentives. Why is the PLI model considered a better fit for India’s manufacturing goals?
Show Approach
Frequently Asked Questions
Q1. What exactly is the PLI scheme?
It’s a government scheme that pays companies a 4-6% cash incentive on the incremental (extra) value of goods they manufacture in India, across 14 strategic sectors, for a fixed period. It’s the main instrument of Atmanirbhar Bharat and rewards actual output rather than just investment.
Q2. Which sector has been the biggest PLI success?
Electronics — especially mobile phones. Domestic mobile production rose roughly 28-fold (from ₹18,000 crore in FY15 to ₹5.45 lakh crore in FY25), and India became a net exporter. Pharma, autos, telecom, and drones have also seen strong gains.
Q3. What are the main criticisms of PLI?
Slow disbursal of incentives (under-utilisation), a weak response in some sectors (solar modules, ACC batteries, textiles, specialty steel), and a bias toward capital-intensive industries that creates fewer jobs. Economists like Raghuram Rajan also warn it may reward assembly over genuine value addition.
Q4. How is the government addressing the “only assembly” criticism?
Through the Electronics Components Manufacturing Scheme (ECMS, outlay raised to ₹40,000 crore) to build a deeper component ecosystem, and the India Semiconductor Mission (Micron’s Sanand plant, Tata’s Dholera fab). Together these aim to raise domestic value addition — moving India from “Assembled in India” to “Made in India.”
Key Takeaways
- What it is: PLI is the flagship Atmanirbhar Bharat tool — a 4-6% incentive on incremental domestic output across 14 sectors (pay-for-performance, not open-ended subsidy).
- Achievements: from ₹1.46L cr investment (Aug 2024) to ₹2.16L cr and ~14.4 lakh jobs (Dec 2025), with ₹20.4L cr incremental production.
- Sector wins: electronics (mobiles ~28x, net exporter), pharma (top global player), autos ($8.15bn), telecom (60% import substitution), solar (65 GW), drones (7-fold).
- Challenges: slow disbursal, muted sectors (ACC batteries, textiles, specialty steel), and a capital-intensive bias that limits jobs.
- Expert caution: Rajan (risk of protectionism/assembly without value addition); Panagariya (keep it selective & time-bound).
- The next step: ECMS (₹40,000 cr) and the Semiconductor Mission to deepen value addition — turning “Assembled in India” into “Made in India.”
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