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Govt. Targets ₹16.7 Lakh Crore Via NMP 2.0 In Infra Monetisation Push

Govt. Targets ₹16.7 Lakh Crore Via NMP 2.0 In Infra Monetisation Push

NMP 2.0 to raise ₹16.7 lakh crore by monetising over 2,000 public assets across 12 ministries. Potential GDP impact of nearly ₹40 lakh crore over five to ten years..

Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman, on Tuesday, revealed the second phase of the National Monetisation Pipeline (NMP 2.0) for 2025–30; a continuation of a policy experiment that began in 2021.

In NMP 2.0, the government plans to monetise over 2,000 assets across 12 ministries, with an expected revenue potential of ₹16.7 lakh crore. It is expected that out of the ₹16.7 crore revenue potential, ₹10.8 lakh crore will be realised between 2025-26 and 2029-30.

In comparison to its previous phase, NMP 1.0 (which raised ₹5.3 lakh crore, or close to 90% of the original target of ₹6 lakh crore), NMP 2.0 is not only ambitious but also a benchmark to test whether asset monetisation can meaningfully support India’s infrastructure financing model.

Sectoral Distribution Of Assets

The pipeline of monetisation covers several infrastructure segments with operating assets that yield stable cash flows:

  • The roads, logistics parks, highways, and ropeways are estimated to generate ₹4.42 lakh crore over five years.
  • The target for the power sector, which includes transmission, generation and distribution linked infrastructure, is ₹2.76 lakh crore.
  • Ports have a monetisation target of ₹2.63 lakh crore. Monetisation possibilities include long-term lease agreements in addition to the existing private participation in cargo handling and terminal management.
  • Railways have a monetisation target of ₹2.62 lakh crore. Station redevelopment projects, dedicated freight corridors, and cargo terminals can be potentially monetised via structured concessions.
  • Coal and mining assets together account for the monetisation potential of over ₹3 lakh crore.
  • Civil aviation, petroleum and natural gas, telecom, warehousing, urban infrastructure and tourism form the remaining pool.

Structure Of Transactions

The government may retain ownership of assets. Monetisation can be implemented through concession models, in which operating rights are sold for a specific time period. They are the toll-operate-transfer models, long-term leasing and infrastructure investment trusts, and public-private partnership structures. Proceeds are also supposed to be reinvested in new infrastructure ventures.

Distribution Of Receipts

According to the Niti Aayog report of the ₹10.8 lakh crore expected between 2025–26 and 2029–30:

  • ₹4.61 lakh crore is estimated to accrue to the Consolidated Fund of India.
  • ₹1.63 lakh crore is projected for public sector undertakings and port authorities.
  • ₹38,418 crore is expected to flow to state consolidated funds.
  • ₹4.18 lakh crore represents private investment committed under concession agreements.

The report estimates that central and PSU proceeds of about ₹6.2 lakh crore could support a total investment of ₹12.2 lakh crore when redeployed into new projects.

Macro And Capex Linkages

The framework links asset monetisation with capital expenditure planning. Over the past several budgets, the government has increased capital expenditure significantly, even as it tries to achieve fiscal consolidation. With asset monetisation, the government gets a source of non-tax, non-debt capital receipts that support financing infrastructure without adding to the fiscal deficit. This leads to two implications. It reduces the need to borrow more, leading to macroeconomic stability, and it also helps the government maintain a high momentum for capital expenditure even when revenue growth may be limited.

As per the Niti Aayog report, NMP 2.0 can have a potential GDP impact of almost ₹40 lakh crore in five to ten years if the capital expenditure multiplier of 3.25 is applied.

Actual outcomes will depend on execution timelines, transaction closures, and investor appetite. NMP 2.0 can potentially stimulate demand for steel, cement, labour and services, logistics and crowding in private investment.

NMP 2.0 is a test of whether India can keep funding infrastructure without adding debt. If asset monetisation stays on track, it gives the government room to sustain spending on roads, power, ports, and railways—supportive for construction, materials, and logistics-linked companies. What investors should track is the pace of deal closures, sector-wise progress, and how quickly proceeds are recycled into fresh projects. Delays or weak investor interest would dilute the impact, making this a medium-term story rather than an immediate trigger.

Sources:

EconomicTimes

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