Business Standard

Building and the blocks

State government has fiscal space to provide for staggered farm loan write-off

- ISHAN BAKSHI & ABHISHEKWA­GHMARE With inputs from Sanjeeb Mukherjee

The Prime Minister’s ambitious programmes to provide housing to the rural and urban poor have been beset with poor fund utilisatio­n and slow execution. SAHIL MAKKAR writes

The farm loan waiver announced by B S Yeddyurapp­a, the newly sworn-in chief minister of Karnataka, might end up costing the state exchequer ~250 billion, government officials told Business Standard.

The modalities of the scheme will be worked out in the coming days. The state’s finance department has asked banks to provide data on outstandin­g crop loans according to the size of the loan and the date on which it was taken to determine the cut-off period. The loan waiver will be capped at ~100,000 per beneficiar­y, as mentioned in the Bharatiya Janata Party’s election manifesto. With the state government in sound financial health, it could finance the loan waiver if it is staggered over a few years, similar to the approach adopted by other states.

Total loans outstandin­g to the agricultur­al sector in Karnataka were ~1.2 trillion at the end of September 2017, shows data from the state-level bankers’ committee. Of this, 35 per cent was accounted for by three major banks, namely Canara Bank, Syndicate Bank, and State Bank of India. Another 24 per cent was through three regional rural banks and cooperativ­es, namely Pragathi Krishna Gramin Bank, Karnataka Vikas Grameena Bank, and The Karnataka State Co- Operative Apex Bank.

Of the total credit outstandin­g, crop loans taken for seeds and fertiliser­s add up to roughly ~600 billion, officials said. The balance consists of term loans for purchase of tractors and for allied activities such as apiculture and poultry.

As past examples of loan waivers have shown, government­s tend to typically waive crop loans. State government officials said of ~600 billion in crop loans, the waiver would be around ~250 billion. “About 30 per cent of farmers have loans outstandin­g of less than ~40,000. For them, the entire loan will be waived,” said an official with the state cooperatio­n department.

To put this farm loan waiver in perspectiv­e, consider that in 2018-19, the Karnataka government’s capital outlay on agricultur­e, animal husbandry, fisheries, rural developmen­t, and water resources in 2018-19, is pegged at ~159 billion, while the state government’s

total capital outlay is pegged at ~296 billion. The ~250 billion figure is in line with estimates by analysts at the Reserve Bank of India, who had quantified state-wise cost to the exchequer assuming farm loans up to ~100,000 were waived. Based on this analysis, if all agricultur­e loans (crop as well as term loans) in Karnataka are waived, it will cost the exchequer ~346 billion. However, if only crop loans are waived then it will cost ~214 billion. This analysis was based on data till March 2016.

The state government could issue bonds to finance the waiver, experts said. Karnataka is one of the least leveraged states in India, with its debt to GSDP ratio at 19.25 per cent in 201819. The state’s fiscal deficit is budgeted at 2.49 per cent of GSDP in 2018-19, down from 2.7 per cent in 2017-18 (RE).

The state is also not bound by the 3 per cent fiscal deficit limit set by the 14th Finance Commission, which had provided states additional leeway if they met certain conditions related to interest payments and debt level.

“In our estimate, the state will be eligible for additional borrowing of 0.5 per cent of GSDP in 2018-19,” said Jayanta Roy, group head, corporate sector ratings, Icra. This leeway allows Karnataka additional fiscal space of around 1 percentage point of GSDP, which translates to roughly ~140 billion. Thus, the state government could stagger the waiver over a few years, following precedents set by other states.

While the waiver could help farmers in the state, experts are worried how such loan waivers are distorting the credit culture in the country. “Farm loan waivers are at best temporary solutions. They are not a long-term response to the crisis facing the agricultur­e sector. More often than not, loan waivers end up disrupting the credit culture,” said Tajmul Haque, former chairman of the Commission for Agricultur­e Costs and Prices and chairman of NITI Aayog’s cell on land policy.

“However, given that farmers in Karnataka have been facing difficult times, a loan waiver could be considered as a temporary solution,” he added.

“In the case of Karnataka, the loan waiver is somewhat justified as the state has been suffering back-to-back droughts,” said P K Joshi, South-Asia director of the Internatio­nal Food Policy Research Institute. “It is more a social objective, though there might not be any economic logic behind it,” he added. The previous Congress government had also provided a ~82 billion farm debt waiver, capped at ~50,000 per farmer.

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