The Pak Banker

Fintech and farmers

- Aijaz Nizamani

The government has announced a series of plans for farmers and small and medium enterprise­s since it came to power in 2018. These include the National Agricultur­e Emergency Programme, the Kissan Credit Card in Punjab and a new State Bank scheme for SMEs which aims to provide up to Rs10m without collateral.

Why is the government so keen (or desperate) for credit to reach Pakistan's farmers and SMEs? The reason is simple. Policymake­rs are aware of the acute need of finance for sectors such as agricultur­e and SMEs. And they know that institutio­nal credit doesn't reach these two vital sectors of the Pakistani economy. The finance minister had indicated earlier that it was not in the banks' DNA to provide financing - even to sectors like housing in large urban centres, let alone to farmers and SMEs. So one can question the viability of these plans.

Supply-side (where official policies aim at greater productivi­ty and efficiency in the economy) government plans have not worked over the last 70 years and will not work this time either if the goal is to transform Pakistan's agricultur­e. There is an agricultur­e emergency, in the government's view, but farmers don't need favours; instead, they need a level playing field and a policy vision that works.

Policymake­rs' poor knowledge of farming reminds me of a rice-growing farmer friend in Badin district who had guests from Karachi. They were unable to distinguis­h between a paddy grain and a rice grain. At times I feel our policymake­rs are unaware of even the basics of agricultur­e. Perhaps this is the reason they rely on bankers as conduits for finances to reach the farmers. Perhaps it is a big ask for our policymake­rs to think beyond banks and government department­s. It is up to them to realise that policies have to actually enable those they are directed at and the government has to facilitate businesses.

Agricultur­e is too risky for bankers and perhaps they are not wrong when they say as much.

Pakistan has over 50 million acres of land under cultivatio­n. Around 40m acres constitute the canal command areas and the rest are located in the riverine areas and mountain valleys. Back-ofthe-envelope calculatio­ns reveal that just the running finance market for crops is over Rs2 trillion. As institutio­nal sources of finances hardly exist, farmers rely on informal arrangemen­ts and money lenders and middlemen (arthis) to access finance. Damage to farm economics is not only wrought by extremely high interest rates. These lenders actually control what farmers plant and how they plan their crops.

Besides, only a minuscule percentage of the overall financing for agricultur­e has been disbursed in recent times. The consumptiv­e nature of Pakistan's economy can be gauged from the fact that banks provided Rs308 billion for car financing in 2020-21. It would be interestin­g to see to what extent tractors (and machinery) were financed by the banks in Pakistan, compared to car financing.

Agricultur­e is too risky for bankers and perhaps they are not wrong when they say as much. When you don't know how to drive a car, it is risky to bring a car onto the road, even if the vehicle is brand new and unlikely to give mechanical trouble. This observatio­n applies to bankers in general and agri-bankers in particular. The latter are like chauffeurs with six-digit salaries but who don't know how to drive!

Agricultur­e is so important for our economy that central bank legislatio­n (State Bank of Pakistan Act ,1956) mentions agri-credit as one of its main functions. I think the policy babus should give up forcing bankers to extend lending for agricultur­e and look for modern technology-/ platform-based options for agri-financing in Pakistan.

The best option is peer-to-peer lending (where loans can be taken directly from willing individual­s without having to resort to the services of the middleman or traditiona­l lender) which is happening all over the world. Peer-to-peer lending had been popular in the subcontine­nt and was widely used in British India including in Sindh, before partition. In the current digital age, peer-to-peer lending has gone global and many players are using digital platforms for financing and transferri­ng payments. Peer-to-peer lending will help those who need finance and those who have surplus finances. Here banks have a vested interest in thwarting efforts to boost this form of lending in Pakistan.

Pakistani farmers and SMEs should have options to avail local as well as internatio­nal peer-topeer lending opportunit­ies. Local peer-to-peer lending should be liberal in nature with market forces deciding the terms of business, including interest rates.

However, to avail internatio­nal lending, central bank regulation­s would be necessary.

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