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India's economy rarely moves in a single direction — and the October 2024 Sumpoorn Index makes that contradiction vivid. In this episode, we unpack a month where the headline composite index dropped, macro indicators stayed soft, two-wheeler sales went through the roof, and the MSME payment crisis deepened to levels that demand urgent national attention. The Sumpoorn Index: What the Numbers Say The Sumpoorn Composite Index for October 2024 fell to 0.53, down from 0.58 in September. The primary driver was a reduction in working days during the month, which compressed output and activity across sectors. Supporting macro data tells a similar story — GST collections grew at just 2%, and the Index of Industrial Production registered a modest 0.4% growth. The overall pace, as our analysts describe it, was muted. Not alarming, but not the kind of momentum India's MSME ecosystem needs to sustain its growth trajectory. #credit #economy #msmepayments The Bright Spot: Auto Ancillary and Two-Wheelers Against this subdued backdrop, one segment stands out with remarkable energy. Auto ancillary and vehicle sales — particularly in the two-wheeler segment — delivered what can only be described as scintillating numbers. TVS and Hero MotoCorp both recorded growth exceeding 30%, a figure that speaks to the resilience of rural demand, the expansion of India's aspirational middle class, and the strength of domestic consumption even when broader industrial output softens. For MSMEs supplying into the auto ancillary ecosystem, this is a genuine bright spot. The Crisis That Refuses to Be Ignored: ₹18 Lakh Crore Unpaid But no honest conversation about India's MSME economy in October 2024 can look away from the payment crisis. ₹18 lakh crore is currently due and unpaid to MSMEs across India — up from ₹10.7 lakh crore in 2021. The word "ancillary" itself comes from the Latin ancilla, meaning maid servant, and as our guest Deepak Karandikar puts it, that is precisely how MSMEs are treated by the large OEMs and public sector enterprises they supply. Shockingly, 69% of these non-payments come not from private corporates but from PSUs — government-owned enterprises. MSMEs are so dependent on these relationships that most are afraid to use the formal redressal mechanisms available to them, knowing that a complaint today means cancelled orders tomorrow. Forced into a corner, they borrow from unorganised lenders and goldsmiths at 18 to 20% interest, pledging personal assets just to keep operations running. The Hope: Digital Credit in 48 Hours There is, however, a structural solution gathering momentum. Digital credit models using GSTN and UPI transaction data are enabling cash-flow-based credit scoring that bypasses the slow, collateral-heavy processes of traditional banking. Lenders using these consent-based digital assessment tools are now approving MSME loans in as little as 48 hours. Adoption will take time, but the direction is clear and the technology is proven. Disclaimer: The views expressed in this video are those of the individual speakers and represent their personal opinions based on available data at the time of recording. Viewers are encouraged to conduct their own research and consult qualified professionals before making any financial decisions.