India- In 3 yrs GeM has processed 28 lakh+ orders worth Rs. 40,000 cr in GMV, 50% transacted by MSMEs

GeM’s ₹8.69 Lakh Crore MSE Procurement Milestone: Digital Public Buying Becomes a Growth Engine for Small Enterprises

GeM was created to make government buying more transparent, faster and more accessible. The platform allows central ministries, state departments, public sector undertakings and other government-linked institutions to buy goods and services through a digital system. Digital India describes GeM as a unified platform for end-to-end procurement, built on the principles of efficiency, transparency and inclusivity.

The Government e Marketplace has crossed a major economic milestone, with procurement from micro and small enterprises reaching more than ₹8.69 lakh crore. DD News reported that the number of registered MSE units on the platform has risen to over 11.9 lakh, compared with only 2,396 units in 2016-17. This sharp rise shows how digital public procurement has opened a larger government market for small businesses across India.

GeM was created to make government buying more transparent, faster and more accessible. The platform allows central ministries, state departments, public sector undertakings and other government-linked institutions to buy goods and services through a digital system. Digital India describes GeM as a unified platform for end-to-end procurement, built on the principles of efficiency, transparency and inclusivity.

The importance of this milestone lies in market access. Earlier, many small firms found government procurement difficult because of paperwork, limited visibility and complex tendering systems. GeM gives smaller sellers a direct route to public buyers. A micro or small enterprise can register, list products or services, compete in bids and receive orders through a structured digital process. This changes government procurement from a closed administrative channel into a broader national marketplace.

The rise from a few thousand registered MSEs in 2016-17 to more than 11.9 lakh units today also reflects the deepening of India’s formal digital economy. Small manufacturers, service providers, artisans, local enterprises, women-led units and start-ups now have a stronger chance to participate in public procurement. This helps spread government spending beyond large vendors and creates demand at the grassroots level.

For the economy, GeM works as more than a buying portal. It supports formalisation, digital payments, price discovery, competition and accountability. When government purchases move through a transparent platform, sellers get wider visibility and buyers get better choice. The process can reduce delays, improve tracking and create a record-based procurement culture.

This achievement also fits into India’s larger MSME growth story. Micro and small enterprises are central to employment, manufacturing, services and local supply chains. Procurement worth ₹8.69 lakh crore from MSEs means public spending is directly feeding small enterprise growth. It strengthens domestic production, encourages entrepreneurship and supports the broader goal of inclusive economic development.

The latest GeM figures show that digital governance can become an economic multiplier. A platform built for government purchases has become a bridge between public institutions and small Indian businesses. As more MSEs join the system, GeM can continue to expand opportunity, improve procurement discipline and give India’s small enterprises a stronger place in the national growth story.