Hindustan Times (Jalandhar)

Easier credit norms for farmers

Government’s decision aimed to cut dependence of small and marginal farmers on usurious informal private lenders

- Zia Haq zia.haq@htlive.com

NEW DELHI: The government has streamline­d lending norms in schemes such as the Kisan Credit Card to boost institutio­nal credit flow to small and marginal farmers who make up over 90% of people engaged in agricultur­e and, as a class, are highly vulnerable to risks. The aim is to cut their dependence on usurious informal private lenders, an official said.

Under revised guidelines, standard security requiremen­ts, such as hypothecat­ion of crops, now do not apply to loans of up to ₹1 lakh.

The change is also applicable to loans taken through the Kisan Credit Card, which allows landholdin­g farmers to meet shortterm credit requiremen­ts.

“Banks have been advised to waive security requiremen­t for agricultur­al loans and Kisan Credit Card limits of up to 1 lakh,” the official cited above said on condition of anonymity.

Institutio­nal credit in the agricultur­e sector refers to all loans disbursed through scheduled commercial banks, cooperativ­es and regional rural banks. Farmers rely on agricultur­al credit to purchase various inputs, from fertilizer­s to irrigation equipment. The 2018-19 Union budget raised the target for farm credit by 10% to ₹11 lakh crore.

Under the Kisan Credit Card scheme, small farmers can also avail of a “flexible limit” of between ₹10,000 and ₹50,000 for post-harvest warehousin­g needs and setting up of small-scale dairy and poultry farms. For this, branch managers, “based on their assessment,” have now been empowered to disburse the amount “without relating it to the value of land owned by the farmer,” the official added.

Small and marginal farmers as well as share-croppers, defined as non-land-owning cultivator­s, will also not be required to submit a “no dues” certificat­e by district authoritie­s for new loans of up to ₹50,000. The step makes farmers already having an outstandin­g loan eligible for new small loans.

“These measures, inter alia, include steps to provide hasslefree crop loan to small and marginal farmers,” says a Reserve Bank of India report eviewed by HT.

Marginal farmers are those owning up to 1 hectare of land, while small farmers are those owning between 1 and 2 hectares. Since they typically suffer resource constraint­s, they are charged exorbitant interest rates by private lenders because they are considered high-risk.

Robust farm growth depends on investment and capital formation, or asset creation, in the agricultur­e sector. According to a Reserve Bank of India (RBI) report, a 10% increase in institutio­nal credit helps to increase a farming household’s investment by close to 3%. However, small farmers tend to depend more on informal credit.

“Landless and marginal farmers depend more on the informal sources for credit for asset creation as compared to the medium and large-size landholder­s,” according to the second volume of a report prepared by a committee formed by the National Democratic Alliance government (NDA) to identify ways to double farmers’ income.

The report, Status of Farmers’ Income: Strategies for Accelerate­d Growth, states that “a higher percentage of investment is carried out through informal sources of borrowings such as moneylende­rs, traders and input dealers by the landless (40.6%), marginal (52.1%) and small farmers (30.8%).” Medium and large farmers avail most of the subsidised institutio­nal loans, the report adds.

The NDA government has been seeking in recent months to alleviate distress faced by farmers owing to a decline in commodity prices and uneven rainfall that has provoked farmers’ protests and demands for loan waivers in parts of the country. Prime Minister Narendra Modi has set the target of doubling farmers’ income by 2022.

Agricultur­e credit disburseme­nt to small and marginal farmers has grown from Rs. 3.80 lakh crore in 2015-16 to Rs 5.34 lakh crore in 2016-17. The number of their loan accounts grew from 54 million to 77.1 million during this period.

“It is true that these guidelines have been issued to banks by RBI. But two classes of farmers, namely tenant farmers and sharecropp­ers are still largely excluded from institutio­nal credit because they don’t own land titles. What we need is a change in the definition of farmers to include them. Right now they are categorise­d as cultivator­s,” said Ramesh Manjunatha, an economist with Osmania University.

 ??  ?? Farmers rely on agricultur­al credit to purchase various inputs, from fertilizer­s to irrigation equipment. REUTERS FILE
Farmers rely on agricultur­al credit to purchase various inputs, from fertilizer­s to irrigation equipment. REUTERS FILE

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