Prime Minister’s Internship Scheme falters as funds largely remain unused


Prime Minister's Internship Scheme (PMIS) — UPSC Study Note


1. At a Glance


2. Why in the News


3. Background & Evolution


4. Core Static Facts

Parameter Detail
Full name Prime Minister's Internship Scheme (PMIS)
Announced in Union Budget 2024-25
Implementing Ministry Ministry of Corporate Affairs (MCA)
Overall Target 1 crore internships over 5 years
Eligible Companies Top 500 companies (by CSR spend); others with MCA approval
Pilot launch date October 3, 2024
Pilot target 1.25 lakh opportunities in FY 2024-25
Sectors covered (Round 1) 25 sectors, 745 districts
Companies (Round 1) ~280 companies
Applications (Round 1) 6.21 lakh applications vs 1.27 lakh openings
Offers made / accepted 82,000+ made; ~28,000 accepted (34% acceptance rate)
Interns completing (as of Nov 30, 2025) 2,066
FY26 Budget Allocation (MCA) ₹11,500+ crore (of which ~₹10,800 crore for PMIS)
FY26 Spend (Apr–Nov) ~₹500 crore (~4%)
FY25 Revised Allocation ₹1,078 crore (cut from ₹2,667 crore)
FY25 Actual Spend ~₹680 crore
Stipend structure ₹5,000/month (₹4,500 from govt + ₹500 from company CSR) [S1]
Duration per intern 12 months
Parliament reply date December 15, 2025 (by FM Nirmala Sitharaman)

5. Multi-Dimensional Analysis

Economic

Social

Ethical / Governance

Administrative

Legal / Constitutional


6. Recent Developments (last 12-18 months)


7. Prelims Hooks

  1. PMIS was announced in Union Budget 2024-25 by Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman. [S1]
  2. Target: 1 crore internships in top 500 companies over 5 years. [S1]
  3. Implementing Ministry: Ministry of Corporate Affairs (MCA) — not Ministry of Skill Development. [S1]
  4. Pilot launched on October 3, 2024, targeting 1.25 lakh opportunities in FY 2024-25. [S2]
  5. Monthly stipend: ₹5,000 (₹4,500 from Government + ₹500 from company CSR fund). [S1]
  6. Internship duration: 12 months. [S1]
  7. Round 1 covered 745 districts across 25 sectors with ~280 companies. [S2]
  8. Round 1 offer acceptance rate: ~34% (28,000 accepted out of 82,000+ offers). [S5]
  9. As of November 30, 2025, only 2,066 interns had completed internships. [S5]
  10. FY26 MCA budget allocation: ₹11,500+ crore, of which ~₹10,800 crore earmarked for PMIS. [S5]
  11. FY26 spend (Apr–Nov): ~₹500 crore (~4% utilisation). [S5]
  12. FY25 revised allocation was cut from ₹2,667 crore to ₹1,078 crore due to poor utilisation. [S5]
  13. CSR linkage: Company contribution governed under Section 135, Companies Act, 2013. [S1]
  14. PMIS Melas were organised (e.g., Kolkata in collaboration with CII) to promote scheme uptake. [S4]
  15. Parliament informed via written reply on December 15, 2025 by FM Sitharaman on scheme's Round 1 outcomes. [S5]

8. Mains Relevance

GS Paper II — Governance, Social Justice; Welfare Schemes for vulnerable sections; issues relating to development and management of social sector resources.

GS Paper III — Indian Economy; Employment; Skill Development; Government Budgeting.

Specific syllabus headings: Welfare schemes for vulnerable sections; Issues of unemployment; Government Budgeting; Role of public sector.

Plausible Mains Questions: 1. "The Prime Minister's Internship Scheme reflects the gap between budgetary ambition and ground-level implementation in India's employment ecosystem. Critically examine." (GS-II/III, 15 marks) 2. "Examine the role of Corporate Social Responsibility in bridging India's skill-to-employment gap, with reference to the Prime Minister's Internship Scheme." (GS-III, 10 marks) 3. "What structural challenges explain the low uptake of government internship and apprenticeship schemes in India? Suggest reforms." (GS-II, 15 marks)


9. Related Topics to Study Next

Topic Why Connected
National Apprenticeship Promotion Scheme (NAPS) Parallel apprenticeship scheme under MoSDE; compare design, uptake, CSR linkage
Corporate Social Responsibility (Section 135, Companies Act 2013) Legal basis for company contribution to PMIS stipend
Union Budget 2024-25 (Interim + Full) PMIS announced here; understand fiscal context and other employment announcements
Skill India Mission / PMKVY Complementary skilling ecosystem; pre-placement training pipeline for PMIS
PM Garib Kalyan Yojana / EPFO subsidies Other government employment-support mechanisms; compare design logic
Parliamentary Committees — Standing Committee on Finance Oversight mechanism that flagged PMIS fund surrender
Controller General of Accounts (CGA) Institution whose spending data revealed the utilisation failure
Demographic Dividend & Youth Unemployment in India Macro context explaining why PMIS was conceived

10. Common Errors / Trap Areas

  1. Wrong Ministry: Aspirants confuse PMIS with schemes under Ministry of Skill Development and Entrepreneurship (MoSDE). PMIS is under MCA — an unusual placement driven by CSR-linkage logic.
  2. Confusing PMIS with NAPS: The National Apprenticeship Promotion Scheme (MoSDE/DGT) predates PMIS; PMIS is not an apprenticeship scheme under the Apprentices Act, 1961 — it has no statutory backing of its own.
  3. Wrong target figure: The 5-year target is 1 crore internships; the pilot target was 1.25 lakh for FY25 — do not conflate the two.
  4. Stipend split: Commonly misremembered as fully government-funded. Correct split: ₹4,500 from GoI + ₹500 from company CSR = ₹5,000/month.
  5. Confusing applications with completions: 6.21 lakh applied, 82,000+ offered, 28,000 accepted, 2,066 completed — these are four distinct, steeply declining numbers; MCQs may mix them.

11. Sources