Business Standard

Credit flow paramount

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This refers to “Microfinan­ce firms feel the ripple effect of liquidity crisis” (October 29). While microfinan­ce institutio­ns are engaged in driving the growth of the microecono­mic activities, it is important to ensure that these organisati­ons are facilitate­d with need-based credit at reasonable terms or else it will negatively impact the growth of small and micro businesses. The persistent liquidity crisis in the non-banking financial company (NBFC) segment is not conducive to micro-lenders. In order to tide over the present liquidity crisis, relaxation­s made by the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) will not deliver the intended results unless the banks have the willingnes­s and capacity to lend to the crisisridd­en NBFCs.

The beneficiar­ies of microcredi­t are mostly from the unorganise­d sector and as such, their capacity to borrow from the organised financial market is near zero. If the microfinan­ce institutio­ns fail to fund the credit requiremen­ts of the microecono­mic activities of the economy, it will adversely affect the idea of inclusive economic growth. The government and the RBI should have to plan and work in tandem to remove the hurdles to ensure a smooth flow of institutio­nal credit at an affordable price to prevent the microcredi­t borrowers from approachin­g private money lenders who charge exorbitant rates. V S K Pillai Kottayam

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