Atmanirbhar Bharat Means Resilient Interdependence, Not Isolation: FM Sitharaman
Union Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman has clarified that the vision of Atmanirbhar Bharat is not about isolationism but represents “a resilient interdependence capable of meeting domestic needs while integrating with global value chains.” Speaking at an SBI conclave in Mumbai, she emphasized that India’s self-reliance strengthens domestic capacity while maintaining global engagement.
Key Takeaways
- Atmanirbhar Bharat focuses on five pillars: economic, social, technological, strategic, and environmental self-reliance
- Infrastructure spending increased nearly fivefold since 2013-14
- Digital welfare delivery saved Rs 4.31 lakh crore through Direct Benefit Transfer
- Foundation for Viksit Bharat 2047 laid since 2014
Five Pillars of Self-Reliance
Sitharaman outlined that Atmanirbhar Bharat rests on five dimensions: economic self-reliance, social self-reliance (Samajik Atmanirbharta), technological self-reliance, strategic self-reliance, and environmental and energy sufficiency. These pillars align with the larger goal of achieving Viksit Bharat 2047.
Infrastructure and Economic Reforms
The minister highlighted massive infrastructure investments, with capital expenditure allocation increasing from Rs 2.30 lakh crore in 2013-14 to Rs 11.21 lakh crore today. She cited concrete achievements:
- National highway construction increased from 11.6 km/day to 34 km/day
- Metro rail expanded to 23 cities with 1,000 km operational
- Port capacity doubled to 2,762 MMTPA with turnaround time improving from 93 to 49 hours
Substantial reforms included removal of 1,500 archaic laws and 45,000 compliances, with GST described as a “next generation” reform.
Financial Inclusion and Social Empowerment
Financial inclusion remains central to economic self-reliance, with 56 crore Jan Dhan accounts, 52 lakh Mudra loan accounts, and 70 lakh PM Swanidhi loans creating “a large pool of young entrepreneurs.”
Sitharaman emphasized the shift from patronage-based support to irreversible empowerment, highlighting welfare achievements:
- 4 crore PM Awas Yojana houses
- 15 crore+ tap water connections
- 12 crore toilets built
- 10 crore LPG cylinders distributed
- 81 crore people receiving free ration
Technology-Driven Governance
The digital public infrastructure enabled Rs 47 lakh crore in Direct Benefit Transfer since 2014, saving Rs 4.31 lakh crore by eliminating “pilferages.” Sitharaman noted these savings are reinvested in public welfare.
The minister concluded that foundational efforts since 2014 will guide India’s progress toward a self-reliant, empowered, and sustainable economy over the next two decades.



