India is standing at a digital crossroads. The next national crisis is unlikely to arrive in the form of a virus carried by people, but through malicious code travelling silently across phones, laptops, and networks.
India is standing at a digital crossroads. The next national crisis is unlikely to arrive in the form of a virus carried by people, but through malicious code travelling silently across phones, laptops, and networks.
Many MSME owners are aware that the market is changing and genuinely want to adopt better and more sustainable practices.
Amid Vidisha’s handloom cluster, resilient women weave heritage and hope, balancing craft and family despite remoteness and limited markets—guardians of tradition, dignity, and dreams stitched into every thread.
According to Fisme, the Indian banking system operates under conditions of monopolistic competition, with high switching costs giving banks significant market power over borrowers, particularly MSMEs
Chandigarh’s MSME sector, once on a meteoric rise, is now facing a sharp downturn—after peaking at over 22,000 units in 2023-24, the numbers have plunged to nearly…
Himachal Pradesh proposes a renewed push for the state’s start-up sector—the MSMEs, crucial to its sustainable and diversified hill economy, beyond the traditional reliance on tourism and large industries.
India’s MSMEs end 2025 under sustained pressure as US tariffs, delayed payments and tight credit erode cash flows and limit growth
For generations, North Indian homes depended on the comforting weight of handmade razais. When lighter, modern mink blankets entered the market, the shift felt practical—less storage space, quicker warmth, easier handling. But in that convenience, we lost something profound.
In the lanes of Soro, Odisha, stone comes alive under the hands of skilled artisans. Generations of carvers transform pink and white stone into statues, lamps, and figurines, each piece carrying tradition, mythology, and patience. Despite modern challenges, this timeless craft continues to echo stories etched in stone.
The D2E project empowers 60,000 women artisans across five Indian states with digital skills, market access, and dignified livelihoods.