Source: Business Standard
Context
On 12 July 2026, a senior government official told Business Standard that the government plans to interlink the Government e-Marketplace (GeM) with the Trade Receivables Discounting System (TReDS) so MSMEs can move seamlessly from procurement → invoice → financing without switching platforms. The move follows the MSME Ministry’s 30 June 2026 notification making it mandatory for all Central Public Sector Enterprises (CPSEs) to settle MSME invoices through RBI-regulated TReDS platforms — a deliverable of Union Budget 2026-27’s 4-pillar TReDS reform package announced by FM Nirmala Sitharaman in her 9th consecutive Budget.
About GeM (Government e-Marketplace)
- Launched: 9 August 2016.
- Nature: National public procurement portal for Central + State departments, PSUs, autonomous bodies.
- Nodal: Ministry of Commerce and Industry (DGS&D restructured into GeM SPV).
- CEO: Ajay Bhadoo (as of 2026).
- Public Procurement Policy 2012: Central government + CPSEs must source at least 25% of annual procurement from MSMEs (revised from 20% to 25% in 2018); of which:
- 4% reserved for MSMEs owned by SC/ST entrepreneurs.
- 3% reserved for women-owned MSMEs.
About TReDS (Trade Receivables Discounting System)
- Launched: 2017 (framework notified by RBI in Dec 2014).
- Regulator: Reserve Bank of India (RBI).
- Nature: Electronic platform for discounting of trade receivables for MSMEs supplying to large buyers.
- How it works:
- MSME uploads accepted invoice on TReDS.
- Multiple financiers (banks/NBFCs) competitively bid to discount.
- MSME accepts best bid; receives payment within 24-48 hours at a discount.
- Financier collects full invoice amount from buyer on due date.
- Registration prerequisite: MSME must be on Udyam portal.
- Nature of finance: Without recourse to seller — MSME NOT liable if buyer defaults.
- Discount rate: Typically 7-11% APR (competitive market rates).
- No collateral or minimum turnover required.
About the Account Aggregator (AA) Framework
- Regulator: RBI (2016 Master Direction, launched 2021).
- Type: Consent-based data-sharing framework.
- Purpose: Consented sharing of user financial data between FIPs (Financial Information Providers) and FIUs (Financial Information Users).
Practice MCQs
Q1. With reference to the proposed GeM–TReDS integration (July 2026):
- GeM is the government’s digital procurement marketplace (est. 2016).
- TReDS is regulated by RBI and facilitates invoice discounting for MSMEs.
- The integration was announced in Union Budget 2026-27.
- The integration is being led by SEBI.
How many are correct? (a) Only one (b) Only two (c) Only three (d) All four
(Statement 4 wrong: Led by MSME Ministry + Ministry of Commerce & Industry, NOT SEBI.)
Q2. With reference to TReDS:
- It is an RBI-regulated electronic platform launched in 2017.
- Currently 5 platforms are authorised: RXIL, M1xchange, Invoicemart, C2treds, DTX.
- TReDS discounting grew from ₹40,000 crore in FY22 to ₹3.47 lakh crore in FY26.
- MSMEs must be registered on Udyam portal to access TReDS.
How many are correct? (a) Only one (b) Only two (c) Only three (d) All four
Answer Key
- (c) — Statement 4 wrong: Led by MSME + Commerce ministries, not SEBI.
- (d) — All correct.
Exam Relevance
- RBI Grade B / SIDBI Grade A: CRITICAL — Direct ESI content on TReDS + Account Aggregator.





