Business Standard

Loan waivers benefit only 30% farmers, mostly rich

This may have prompted PM Modi to reject the idea of a nationwide waiver

- ABHISHEKWA­GHMARE

In a television interview earlier this month, Prime Minister Narendra Modi categorica­lly rejected the possibilit­y of a nationwide farm loan waiver in the run-up to the general elections.

The debate on whether a loan waiver is the right way to alleviate farm distress, or whether cash support is a better and more enduring solution will go on. But it is worth revisiting the after-effects of the second nationwide farm loan waiver scheme implemente­d in India in 2008.

A lopsided scheme?

Firstly, a recent survey by National Bank for Agricultur­e and Rural Developmen­t (Nabard) shows that loan waivers benefitted only 30 per cent of the farmers in India in 2016-17.

Secondly, it is the bigger land owners who are likely to benefit more from any waiver, if the scheme is not limited to small and marginal farmers; the reason for this is that their level of indebtedne­ss is twice that of small farmers.

Thirdly, while the gap between the income levels and debt outstandin­g of big farmers is much smaller than that of small farmers, whose income levels are just a fraction of their loans.

Finally, the report by the Comptrolle­r and Auditor General (CAG) on the farm loan waiver implemente­d by the erstwhile United Progressiv­e Alliance government shows that a substantia­l proportion of beneficiar­ies faced lapses in the form of no benefit or reduced benefit. Further, a host of irregulari­ties were reported in its implementa­tion due to a multiplici­ty of stakeholde­rs and the limited use of technology.

Waiver math

The Nabard survey said that about 43.5 per cent of farmers availed loans in their reference period. Of them, about 69.7 per cent completely or partially relied on banks and other institutio­nal sources for financial assistance. This means that only 30 per cent of all farmers in the country actually take loans from banks.

Under such circumstan­ces, a waiver of the outstandin­g dues of farmers payable to banks, would benefit less than third of the country's cultivator­s.

The indebtedne­ss and loan taking ability across decile classes of income is striking. A decile is a tenth portion of a group, and monthly per capita expenditur­e has been used as an indicator of income.

In the richest decile (roughly farmers who form the top 10 per cent of spenders), about 68 per cent of farmer households were indebted in 2016-17. In the same group, about 61 per cent had availed fresh finance from banks and informal sources put together. In the poorest decile (roughly farmers who form the bottom 10 per cent of spenders), about 40 per cent are indebted, and less than a third, or 32 per cent, had availed fresh loans.

Across the ten deciles, annual incomes of the poorest are way less than the average debt held by the households. For example, in the poorest decile, average outstandin­g farm debt is at least six times the annual income. In the richest decile, the annual income is 1.5 times the outstandin­g debt.

Further, the outstandin­g debt in the 2nd to the 7th decile is less than the outstandin­g debt held by the poorest decile. This means that wealthier the farmers are better off by a huge margin than the poorest of them.

Now, let us look at how the 2008 debt waiver by the UPA, or the Agricultur­al Debt Waiver and Debt Relief scheme, turned out. As against the intended beneficiar­y count of 42.9 million farmers, the scheme at its closure could benefit 80 per cent of them, or about 34.5 million.

The CAG surveyed some 90,000 farmers—about 10 per cent of whom were nonbenefic­iaries—after the complete implementa­tion of the scheme.

More than 700 bank branches in 92 districts in the country were surveyed.

A third of the farmers did not get any financial acknowledg­ement of the waived debt. This is crucial since the proof of issue certificat­e is mandatory for farmers to get fresh loans in the subsequent farming seasons. Bihar and Andhra Pradesh had the highest proportion of such cases, the CAG report said. Business Standard had earlier reported on how credit disbursal falls in immediate years after loan waiver implementa­tion in states. More than a fifth of cases in the audit had serious lapses or errors of some or the other kind, with many overlaps of the following kinds.

On the one hand, about 13.5 per cent of the accounts not deemed eligible were found to be actually eligible, but for some reason banks did not certify them as beneficiar­ies. Bulk of these accounts were farmers from Madhya Pradesh.

On the other, of those who benefitted from the scheme, about 8.5 per cent were actually ineligible for debt relief. Madhya Pradesh got its name etched in this category well, with about a fourth of such cases in the state. Karnataka had the highest proportion of such cases in the CAG audit.

The newly elected Madhya Pradesh government has notified a farm debt waiver scheme in the state.

Of those eligible, there was a mismatch to some extent with regard to the amount to be waived. About 4 per cent of the farmers’ accounts received undue benefits, while 2 per cent received less money than they were entitled to.

In six per cent of the cases, banks claimed interest charges from the scheme which were not borne by the indebted farmers in the first place. This happened since the DFS did not have bank and branch-wise details on the interest payment eligible to banks. The national auditor pointed out that the department of financial services in the finance ministry, which was the leading implemente­r of the scheme was unable to monitor the implementa­tion that panned over four years. This issue seems to have been resolved to some extent due to better availabili­ty and computeris­ation of data and records, say bankers and state officials who are currently implementi­ng the scheme. Banks were given a paltry window of 35 days to finalise the list of beneficiar­ies which totaled 4.29 million in the final count. This was a major reason for most of the irregulari­ties that ensued later, the CAG report said. The final tally of beneficiar­ies was 34.5 million.

 ??  ??
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India