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

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UPSC Study Note: Centre's Focus Shifts from Selling PSUs to Earning More from Them


1. At a Glance


2. Why in the News


3. Background & Evolution

Year Milestone
1991 Disinvestment formally begins post-liberalisation; Ministry of Disinvestment set up
2004 Ministry of Disinvestment merged into Department of Disinvestment under MoF
2016 Department of Disinvestment renamed DIPAM (Department of Investment and Public Asset Management)
2020 Revised Disinvestment Policy announced; separate strategic vs. non-strategic classification
2021 (Feb) National Monetisation Pipeline (NMP 1.0) conceptualised in Union Budget
2021 (Aug) NMP 1.0 launched by NITI Aayog — ₹6 lakh crore pipeline over FY2022–25; covers highways, railways, power, telecom, etc. [S4]
2021 Public Sector Enterprises (PSE) Policy announced: government to exit all non-strategic sectors; retain minimum presence in 4 strategic sectors (atomic energy, space & defence, transport & logistics, energy) [S1][S5]
2021 PM Modi (DIPAM webinar): "Government has no business to be in business" — peak disinvestment rhetoric [S5]
2022–23 Brief surge in disinvestment receipts (e.g., LIC IPO)
2024 onwards Disinvestment targets consistently missed; dividend receipts growing; policy pivot becomes evident
Apr 2025 DIPAM disinvests 3.61% stake in Mazagon Dock Shipbuilders Ltd via OFS; realises ₹3,673 crore [S2]
Feb 2026 NMP 2.0 launched — ₹16.72 lakh crore pipeline over FY2026–30 [S3]

4. Core Static Facts

DIPAM & Institutional Framework - Full form: Department of Investment and Public Asset Management - Parent: Ministry of Finance - Mandate: Manages GoI equity in CPSEs, disinvestment transactions, dividend policy, OFS (Offer for Sale), ETF routes

PSE Policy 2021 — Strategic Sector Classification - Government retains minimum presence in 4 strategic sectors: 1. Atomic Energy, Space & Defence 2. Transport & Logistics 3. Energy (incl. petroleum) 4. Banking, Insurance & Financial Services - All other sectors: Government to progressively exit

NMP 2.0 (2026–30) — Key Numbers [S3] - Aggregate monetisation potential: ₹16.72 lakh crore - Private sector investment component: ₹5.8 lakh crore - Period: FY2026 to FY2030 (5 years) - Developed by: NITI Aayog in consultation with line ministries - Mandate: From Union Budget 2025–26 ('Asset Monetisation Plan 2025–30')

Sectors Covered under NMP 2.0 [S3] - Highways (incl. MMLPs, ropeways), Railways, Power, Petroleum & Natural Gas, Civil Aviation, Ports, Warehousing & Storage, Urban Infrastructure, Coal, Mines, Telecom, Tourism

NMP 1.0 (2021–25) [S4] - Total pipeline: ₹6 lakh crore - Period: FY2022–FY2025

Dividend Trend [S2][S5] - Dividend payouts from CPSEs have consistently increased since FY2020–21 despite progressive dilution of GoI shareholding through disinvestment - Attributed to: enhanced accountability mechanisms, efficient capital management policies

Modes of Disinvestment - OFS (Offer for Sale) | IPO | Strategic Sale | ETF (CPSE ETF, Bharat-22 ETF)


5. Multi-Dimensional Analysis

Economic

Administrative / Governance

Legal / Constitutional

Historical

Ethical / Governance


6. Recent Developments (last 12–18 months)


7. Prelims Hooks (high-density factual bullets)

  1. DIPAM stands for Department of Investment and Public Asset Management — under Ministry of Finance (not Commerce). [S2]
  2. NMP 2.0 was launched by Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman and developed by NITI Aayog. [S3]
  3. NMP 2.0 aggregate monetisation potential: ₹16.72 lakh crore; private sector component: ₹5.8 lakh crore; period: FY2026–2030. [S3]
  4. NMP 1.0 (launched August 2021): pipeline of ₹6 lakh crore over FY2022–25. [S4]
  5. The PSE Policy 2021 designates 4 strategic sectors where the government retains minimum presence; exits all others. [S5]
  6. PM Modi made the statement "Government has no business to be in business" at a DIPAM webinar in 2021. [S5]
  7. Mazagon Dock Shipbuilders stake sale (OFS) in April 2025 realised ₹3,673.42 crore for GoI. [S2]
  8. Dividend income from CPSEs has grown consistently since FY2020–21 even as government shareholding was diluted. [S2]
  9. Disinvestment revenue surged briefly only in FY2022–23 (driven largely by the LIC IPO) before resuming its decline. [S5]
  10. NMP 2.0 covers 12 sectors including highways, railways, petroleum & natural gas, civil aviation, ports, telecom, and tourism. [S3]
  11. Asset monetisation under NMP does not transfer ownership — assets are leased/concessioned to private operators and revert to the government. [S4]
  12. The mandate for NMP 2.0 was first announced in Union Budget 2025–26 as the 'Asset Monetisation Plan 2025–30'. [S3]
  13. The government removed a separate 'disinvestment' heading from Budget documents — treating proceeds under broader capital receipts from Budget 2026–27. [S5]

8. Mains Relevance

GS Paper(s): GS-III (Primary); GS-II (Secondary)

Syllabus Headings: - GS-III: Indian Economy — Government Budgeting; Effects of Liberalisation on the Economy; Changes in Industrial Policy; Infrastructure - GS-II: Government Policies and Interventions for Development in various sectors

Plausible Mains Question Stems:

  1. "The launch of National Monetisation Pipeline 2.0 represents a pragmatic recalibration of India's public sector strategy. Critically examine the shift from disinvestment to asset monetisation, its fiscal implications, and governance challenges." (GS-III, 15 marks)

  2. "Despite the Public Sector Enterprises Policy 2021 committing to exit non-strategic sectors, disinvestment has largely stalled. Analyse the reasons and evaluate whether dividend maximisation and asset monetisation are adequate substitutes." (GS-III, 15 marks)

  3. "Asset monetisation without ownership transfer raises concerns about accountability and public interest. Do you agree? Substantiate with reference to India's National Monetisation Pipeline." (GS-III/GS-IV, 10 marks)


9. Related Topics to Study Next

Topic Connection
NMP 1.0 (2021–25) — Niti Aayog Predecessor to NMP 2.0; basis for comparing original targets vs. achievement
CPSE ETF / Bharat-22 ETF Key instrument for minority stake disinvestment without strategic sale
Air India Strategic Sale (2022) India's landmark strategic disinvestment; process, timeline, lessons
PSE Policy 2021 — Strategic Sector Classification Core policy document underpinning the disinvestment/retention framework
Fiscal Deficit & Capital Receipts Disinvestment receipts are capital receipts; their decline affects fiscal arithmetic
Public-Private Partnership (PPP) Models Asset monetisation works via PPP concessions — TOT, InvIT, REIT models
Infrastructure Investment Trusts (InvITs) Monetisation instrument used for roads, power lines; SEBI regulated
Minimum Alternate Tax (MAT) & CPSE Dividends Dividend policy of CPSEs has tax and regulatory dimensions

10. Common Errors / Trap Areas

  1. DIPAM ≠ Ministry of Disinvestment: DIPAM is a department under Ministry of Finance, not a standalone ministry. Aspirants confuse it with the erstwhile Ministry of Disinvestment (which existed 1999–2004).

  2. NMP is NOT privatisation: Asset monetisation transfers operational rights temporarily (lease/concession), not ownership. Ownership remains with the government. Confusing monetisation with disinvestment is the #1 conceptual error.

  3. NMP 2.0 vs NMP 1.0 figures: NMP 1.0 = ₹6 lakh crore (FY2022–25); NMP 2.0 = ₹16.72 lakh crore (FY2026–30). Do not mix them up.

  4. PSE Policy's "4 strategic sectors": The sectors are sometimes misquoted. Note that banking & financial services is strategic; defence manufacturing is strategic — but most manufacturing PSUs in non-defence areas are slated for exit.

  5. Dividend income ≠ Disinvestment receipt: In Budget documents, these appear under different heads — dividends are revenue receipts; disinvestment proceeds are capital receipts. Confusing the two distorts fiscal analysis.


11. Sources