Business Standard

Farm debt shows little decline, but income rises: Nabard

- SANJEEB MUKHERJEE

Almost 53 per cent of agricultur­al households in India are under debt, a number which has not gone down by much between 2012-13 and 2015-16, a survey by the National Bank for Agricultur­e and Rural Developmen­t (Nabard), compared with the last Situationa­l Assessment Survey of NSSO, showed. However, the quantum of average loan per household rose by almost 122 per cent during the period.

The Nabard survey released on Thursday also showed that the average income of Indian farmers grew at a compound rate of 12 per cent per annum between 2012-13 and 2015-16.

This, if accurate, is more than the compound annual growth rate (CAGR) in income as estimated by a high-powered government panel on doubling income by 2022. The panel under the chairmansh­ip of Chief Executive Officer of National Rainfed Area Authority Ashok Dalwai had pointed out that the real income of farmers needs to register a CAGR of 10.4 per cent in order to double by 2022.

The Nabard survey showed that during 2015-16, the income of farmers in 19 out of the 29 states was above the all-India average and 15 states recorded an annual compound growth rate of above 10.5 per cent between 2012-13 and 2015-16.

“In agricultur­al households, cultivatio­n contribute­d to 34 per cent of the income, while in nonagricul­tural households, wages contribute­d the bulk 54 per cent of the incomes,” the survey said.

The Nabard survey was done in associatio­n with the Academy of Management Studies from July 1, 2015, to June 30, 2016, covering 29 states that included 40,327 households and a population of 187,518.

The Nabard survey showed that in 2015-16, Telangana showed the highest incidence of indebtedne­ss (79 per cent), followed by Andhra Pradesh (77 per cent), and Karnataka (74 per cent). The National Sample Survey Office survey of 2012-13, too, had found the highest incidence of indebtedne­ss in Andhra Pradesh, followed by Telangana, Tamil Nadu, and Assam.

“Under the Nabard Financial Inclusion Survey, a household was considered indebted if it had any outstandin­g loan on the date of survey. The households that confirmed the presence of any outstandin­g loan on that specific date was considered indebted,” the survey said.

About 43 per cent of nonagricul­tural households were reportedly indebted at the time of the survey, taking the total rural households that reported debt to 47.4 per cent. About 60.4 per cent of the households, the survey said, had borrowed money from institutio­nal sources, while 30.3 per cent borrowed from non-institutio­nal sources, and 9.2 per cent agricultur­al households borrowed from both.

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