Reserve Bank of India Occasional Papers
Vol. 28, No. 1, Summer 2007
Current Issues in Agriculture Credit in India:
An Assessment
Ramesh Golait*
This paper attempts to analyse the issues in agricultural credit in India. The analysis
reveals that the credit delivery to the agriculture sector continues to be inadequate. It
appears that the banking system is still hesitant on various grounds to purvey credit to
small and marginal farmers. The situation calls for concerted efforts to augment the flow
of credit to agriculture, alongside exploring new innovations in product design and methods
of delivery, through better use of technology and related processes. Facilitating credit
through processors, input dealers, NGOs, etc., that are vertically integrated with the
farmers, including through contract farming, for providing them critical inputs or
processing their produce, could increase the credit flow to agriculture significantly.
JEL Classification : F 361, 362, Q14
Keywords
: Agriculture, Credit, Rural
Introduction
Agriculture plays a crucial role in the development of the Indian
economy. It accounts for about 19 per cent of GDP and about twothirds of the population is dependent on the sector. The importance
of farm credit as a critical input to agriculture is reinforced by the
unique role of Indian agriculture in the macroeconomic framework
and its role in poverty alleviation. Recognising the importance of
agriculture sector in India’s development, the Government and the
Reserve Bank of India (RBI) have played a vital role in creating a
broad-based institutional framework for catering to the increasing
credit requirements of the sector. Agricultural policies in India have
been reviewed from time to time to maintain pace with the changing
* The author is Assistant Adviser in the Department of Economic Analysis and Policy of
the Bank. He is grateful to Shri K.U.B Rao, Adviser for constant encouragement. The
responsibility for the views expressed in the paper rests with the author only and the usual
disclaimer applies.
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RESERVE BANK OF INDIA OCCASIONAL PAPERS
requirements of the agriculture sector, which forms an important
segment of the priority sector lending of scheduled commercial banks
(SCBs) and target of 18 per cent of net bank credit has been stipulated
for the sector. The Approach Paper to the Eleventh Five Year Plan
has set a target of 4 per cent for the agriculture sector within the
overall GDP growth target of 9 per cent. In this context, the need for
affordable, sufficient and timely supply of institutional credit to
agriculture has assumed critical importance.
The evolution of institutional credit to agriculture could be
broadly classified into four distinct phases - 1904-1969
(predominance of co-operatives and setting up of RBI), 1969-1975
[nationalisation of commercial banks and setting up of Regional Rural
Banks (RRBs)], 1975-1990 (setting up of NABARD) and from 1991
onwards (financial sector reforms).
The genesis of institutional involvement in the sphere of
agricultural credit could be traced back to the enactment of the Cooperative Societies Act in 1904. The establishment of the RBI in 1935
reinforced the process of institutional development for agricultural
credit. The RBI is perhaps the first central bank in the world to
have taken interest in the matters related to agriculture and
agricultural credit, and it continues to do so (Reddy, 2001).
The demand for agricultural credit arises due to i) lack of
simultaneity between the realisation of income and act of expenditure;
ii) lumpiness of investment in fixed capital formation; and iii)
stochastic surges in capital needs and saving that accompany
technological innovations. Credit, as one of the critical non-land
inputs, has two-dimensions from the viewpoint of its contribution to
the augmentation of agricultural growth viz., availability of credit
(the quantum) and the distribution of credit. In this paper, the trends
in agricultural credit are analysed in Section I; Section II covers Statewise distribution of institutional credit; Section III deals with recent
policy initiatives; issues and concerns are dealt with in Section IV;
Section V draws implications for the future followed by the
concluding observations in Section VI.
CURRENT ISSUES IN AGRICULTURE
81
Section I
Agricultural Credit: Discernible Trends
In India a multi-agency approach comprising co-operative banks,
scheduled commercial banks and RRBs has been followed for
purveying credit to agricultural sector. The policy of agricultural credit
is guided mainly by the considerations of ensuring adequate and
timely availability of credit at reasonable rates through the expansion
of institutional framework, its outreach and scale as also by way of
directed lending. Over time, spectacular progress has been achieved
in terms of the scale and outreach of institutional framework for
agricultural credit. Some of the major discernible trends are as
follows:
●
Over time the public sector banks have made commendable
progress in terms of putting in place a wide banking network,
particularly in the aftermath of nationalisation of banks. The
number of offices of public sector banks increased rapidly from
8,262 in June 1969 to 68,355 by March 2005.
●
One of the major achievements in the post-independent India
has been widening the spread of institutional machinery for credit
and decline in the role of non-institutional sources,
notwithstanding some reversal in the trend observed particularly
in the 1990s.
●
The share of institutional credit, which was little over 7 per cent
in 1951, increased manifold to over 66 per cent in 1991, reflecting
concomitantly a remarkable decline in the share of noninstitutional credit from around 93 per cent to about 31 per cent
during the same period. However, the latest NSSO Survey reveals
that the share of non-institutional credit has taken a reverse swing
which is a cause of concern (Table 1).
●
Notwithstanding their wide network, co-operative banks,
particularly since the 1990s have lost their dominant position to
commercial banks. The share of co-operative banks (22 per cent)
during 2005-06 was less than half of what it was in 1992-93 (62
per cent), while the share of commercial banks (33 to 68 per
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RESERVE BANK OF INDIA OCCASIONAL PAPERS
Table 1: Relative Share of Borrowing of Cultivator Households
from Different Sources
(Per cent)
Sources Credit
1
Non-Institutional
of which
Money Lenders
Institutional
of which
Cooperatives Societies / Banks
Commercial Banks
Unspecified
Total
1951
1961
1971
1981
1991
2002
2
3
4
5
6
7
92.7
81.3
68.3
36.8
30.6
38.9
69.7
49.2
36.1
16.1
17.5
26.8
7.3
18.7
31.7
63.2
66.3
61.1
3.3
0.9
–
100.0
2.6
0.6
–
100.0
22.0
2.4
–
100.0
29.8
28.8
–
100.0
23.6
35.2
3.1
100.0
30.2
26.3
–
100.0
Source : All India Debt and Investment Survey and NSSO.
cent) including RRBs (5 to 10 per cent) almost doubled during
the above period (Chart 1).
●
The efforts to increase the flow of credit to agriculture seems to
have yielded better results in the recent period as the total
institutional credit to agriculture recorded a growth of around
21 per cent during 1995-96 to 2004-05 from little over 12 per
cent during 1986-87 to 1994-95. In terms of total credit to
agriculture, the commercial banks recorded a considerable
CURRENT ISSUES IN AGRICULTURE
83
growth (from around 13 per cent to about 21 per cent), while cooperative banks registered a fall (over 14 per cent to over 10 per
cent) during the above period (Table 2).
●
However, the growth of direct finance to agriculture and allied
activities witnessed a decline in the 1990s1 (12 per cent) as compared
to the 1980s (14 per cent) and 1970s (around 16 per cent).
Furthermore, a comparative analysis of direct credit to agriculture
and allied activities during 1980s and since 1990s reveals the fact
that the average share of long-term credit in the total direct finance
has not only been much lower but has also decelerated (from over 38
per cent to around 36 per cent), which could have dampening effect
on the agricultural investment for future growth process (Chart 2).
Table 2: Institutional Credit to Agriculture
(Rs. crore)
Year
Institutions
Co-op
Share
Banks (per cent)
1
1985-86
1986-87
1987-88
1988-89
1989-90
1990-91
1991-92
1992-93
1993-94
1994-95
1995-96
1996-97
1997-98
1998-99
1999-00
2000-01
2001-02
2002-03
2003-04
2004-05
2005-06
2006-07*
RRBs
Share Commercial
Share
(per
Banks (per cent)
cent)
Total
Per cent
increase
2
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
3,874
4,207
4,420
4,851
5,082
3,408
5,800
9,378
10,117
9,406
10,479
11,944
14,085
15,916
18,363
20,801
23,604
23,716
26,959
31,424
39,404
33,174
55
52
52
53
52
39
52
62
61
50
48
45
44
43
40
39
38
34
31
25
22
22
–
–
–
–
–
–
596
831
977
1,083
1,381
1,684
2,040
2,538
3,172
4,219
4,854
6,070
7,581
12,404
15,223
15,170
–
–
–
–
–
–
5
5
6
6
6
6
6
7
7
8
8
9
9
10
8
10
3,131
3,809
4,009
4,233
4,719
5,438
4,806
4,960
5,400
8,255
10,172
12,783
15,831
18,443
24,733
27,807
33,587
39,774
52,441
81,481
1,25859
1,00,999
45
48
48
47
48
61
43
33
33
44
46
48
50
50
53
53
54
57
60
65
70
68
7,005
8,016
8,429
9,084
9,801
8,846
11,202
15,169
16,494
18,744
22,032
26,411
31,956
36,897
46,268
52,827
62,045
69,560
86,981
1,25,309
1,80,486
1,49,349
–
14
5
8
8
-10
27
35
9
14
18
20
21
15
25
14
17
12
25
44
44
–
* : up to December 2006.
Note : Commercial Banks and RRBs were clubbed together up to 1990-91.
Source : Economic Survey and NABARD various issues.
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RESERVE BANK OF INDIA OCCASIONAL PAPERS
●
The disaggregated picture as per size-wise distribution of credit
reveals that the growth of direct finance to small and marginal
farmers witnessed a marked deceleration from about 24 per cent
in the 1980s to little over 13 per cent during the 1990s.
●
Sectoral deployment of gross bank credit reveals that the share
of agriculture since the second half of 1990s has ranged between
11-12 per cent. As at end March 2006, the share stood at around
11.9 per cent (Table 3).
Table 3: Sectoral Deployment of Gross Bank Credit
(Rupees crore)
Sectors
1
Gross Bank Credit
A. Priority Sector
I. Agriculture
Share of
Agriculture in
Total
II. Small Scale
Industries
III. Other Priority
Sector
B. Industry
Share of Industry
in Total
1996-97 1997-98 1998-99 1999-00 2000-01 2001-02 2002-03 2003-04 2004-05 2005-06
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
2,58,991 3,00,283 3,42,012 4,00,818 4,69,153 5,36,727 6,69,534 7,64,383 10,40,909 14,45,837
84,880
99,507 1,14,611 1,31,827 1,54,414 1,75,259 2,11,609 2,63,834 3,81,476 5,09,910
31,442
34,869
39,634
44,381
51,922
60,761
73,518
90,541 1,25,250 1,72,279
12.14
11.61
11.59
11.07
11.07
11.32
10.98
11.84
12.03
11.92
35,944
43,508
48,483
52,841
56,002
57,119
60,394
65,855
74,588
90,239
17,494
21,130
26,494
34,362
46,490
57,299
77,697 1,07,438
1,81,638 2,47,379
1,02,604 1,17,350 1,30,516 1,47,319 1,62,837 1,72,324 2,35,168 2,47,210
3,52,304 4,58,808
39.62
39.08
38.16
36.75
34.71
Source : Report on Trend and Progress of Banking in India, Various issues.
32.11
35.12
32.34
33.85
31.73
CURRENT ISSUES IN AGRICULTURE
85
Section II
State-wise Distribution of Institutional Credit
There are wide variations in the availability of institutional
credit per hectare of gross cropped area in different States. It was as
high as Rs.9,403 in Tamil Nadu, Rs.7,666 in Kerala, Rs.5,352 in
Punjab and Rs.4,604 in Andhra Pradesh, while it was as low as Rs.311
in Assam, Rs.667 in Rajsthan and Rs.698 in Madhya Pradesh during
2001-02 (Table 4).
Table 4: Distribution of Flow of Institutional Agricultural
Credit in Different States of India
Region/States
1990-91
Rs.
Crore
1
2001-02
Per
cent
Rs.
Crore
Annual PercenIncrease
tage
(per
GCA
Per
cent
cent) (199899)
Rs./hectare of Annual
GCA
Increase
(per
19902001cent)
91
02
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
1,314
642
285
326
20
20
12.9
6.3
2.8
3.2
0.2
0.2
8,236
4,304
1,821
1,490
248
83
19.9
10.4
4.4
3.6
0.6
0.2
43.9
47.5
44.9
29.7
93.2
25.5
20.25
4.22
3.22
11.70
0.51
0.57
377
856
482
168
207
191
2,132
5,352
2,964
667
2,555
764
38.9
43.8
42.9
24.7
94.5
25.0
41
20
0.4
0.2
207
124
0.5
0.3
34.0
42.4
2.90
2.09
96
54
374
311
31.4
39.9
Eastern
Orissa
West Bengal
Bihar (includes Jharkhand)
846
306
285
245
8.3
3.0
2.8
2.4
3,062
414
1,573
1,076
7.4
1.0
3.8
2.6
21.8
3.0
37.6
28.3
14.71
4.53
4.83
5.25
463
319
329
233
1,092
479
1,708
1,075
22.8
4.2
34.9
30.1
Central
Madhya Pradesh (includes
Chhatisgarh)
Utrtar Pradesh (includes
Uttranchal)
1,722
16.9
5,835
14.1
19.9
27.57
349
1,110
18.2
746
7.5
1,821
4.4
11.5
13.67
320
698
9.9
958
9.4
4,056
9.8
27.0
13.90
376
1,529
25.6
Western
Gujarat
Maharashtra
1,386
520
846
13.6
5.1
8.3
5,959
2,980
2,938
14.4
7.2
7.1
27.5
39.5
20.6
7.06
5.56
11.40
430
501
387
1,831
2,809
1,352
27.4
38.3
20.8
Southern
Andhra Pradesh
Karnataka
Kerala
Tamil Nadu
4,880
1,477
642
835
1,895
47.9 18,127
14.5
5,587
6.3
4,041
8.2
2,276
18.6
6,166
43.8
13.5
9.7
5.5
14.9
22.6
23.2
43.8
14.4
18.8
17.51
6.36
6.13
1.56
3.44
1,410
1,120
546
2,766
2,857
5,426
4,604
3,432
7,666
9,403
23.8
25.9
44.1
14.8
19.1
100.0
25.5
100.00
549
2,169
24.6
Northern
Punjab
Haryana
Rajasthan
Himachal Pradesh
Jammu and Kashmir
North-Eastern
Assam
All-India
10,188
100.0
41,385
10
GCA refers to gross cropped area.
Source : Report of the Advisory Committee on Flow of Credit to Agriculture and Related Activities from the
Banking System, RBI, Mumbai, 2004.
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RESERVE BANK OF INDIA OCCASIONAL PAPERS
The accessibility to institutional credit is higher in the Southern
region where the level of agricultural development is also higher.
Similar results were reported in the studies conducted earlier during
the 1980s (Rao, 1994). It is kind of vicious cycle operating in less
developed States. Less availability of credit influences adversely the
adoption of modern technology and private capital investments, which
in turn lowers the productive capacity of the agricultural sector and
results in lower productivity and production, and also pushes the
farmers to borrow from non-institutional sources. Consequently, the
demand for agricultural credit for short and long-term purposes is
dampened.
The extent of deployment of credit out of deposits in a given
State could be measured by Credit-Deposit Ratio (CDR). The
proportion of districts having CDR less than 40 is higher (66 per
cent) in less developed States as compared to the developed States
(32 per cent) indicating growing migration and wide disparities in
the deployment of credit in major States (Table 5).
During Tenth Five Year Plan, the total credit flow to agriculture
and allied activities was projected at Rs.7,36,570 crore. Accordingly,
the ground level credit flow to agriculture has grown to reach over
Rs.2,60,540 crore (36 per cent of the projected level) during the
first three year period (2002-03 to 2004-05) of Tenth Plan, indicating
a wide gap in supply of credit, requiring a large increase in credit,
particularly in investment credit to achieve the desired growth level.
Table 5: Credit Deposit Ratio in Major States
(Rupees crore)
Description
Number of
States
Number of
Districts
<40
40-50
>50
1
2
3
4
5
6
States with per capita SDP
less than national average
9
196
(100)
129
(66)
26
(13)
41
(21)
States with per capita SDP
more than national average
11
187
(100)
60
(32)
33
(18)
94
(50)
Total
20
383
(100)
189
(50)
59
(15)
134
(35)
Figures in the brackets represent percentages. Credit is taken on utilization basis.
Source : Report of the Expert Group on Investment Credit, RBI, 2005.
CURRENT ISSUES IN AGRICULTURE
87
Section III
Recent Policy Initiatives
The Finance Minister in his Union Budget 1995-96 speech stated
that, “Inadequacy of public investment in agriculture is today a matter
of general concern. This is an area which is the responsibility of States.
But many States have neglected investment in infrastructure for
agriculture. There are many rural infrastructure projects which have
been started but are lying incomplete for want of resources. They
represent a major loss of potential income and employment to rural
population.”
Rural Infrastructure Development Fund (RIDF) was set up in
NABARD2. Since then, 11 tranches of allocations have been made
towards the Fund. Commercial banks make contributions towards
the Fund on account of the shortfalls in their priority/agriculture
sector lending. The scope of RIDF has been widened to enable
utilisation of loan by Panchayati Raj Institutions (PRIs), Self-Help
Groups (SHGs), Non-Government Organisations (NGOs), etc., since
1999-2000.
The Fund has continued with additional corpus being announced
every year in the Union Budget. The RIDF XI was announced in the
Union Budget for 2005-06 with an allocation of Rs.8,000 crore
making a total corpus of Rs.50,000 crore. RIDF XI accorded special
emphasis for setting up of Village Knowledge Centres by providing
Rs.100 crore out of the corpus of Rs.8,000 crore (Table 6).
Two innovations, viz., micro-finance and Kisan Credit Card
Scheme (KCCS) have emerged as the major policy developments in
addressing the infirmities associated with the distributional aspects
of credit in the recent years. The KCCS has emerged as the most
effective mode of credit delivery to agriculture in terms of the
timeliness, hassle-free operations as also adequacy of credit with
minimum of transaction costs and documentation.
Around 59.09 million KCCs were issued till end-March 2006.
The cooperative banks (51.5 per cent) had a major share followed
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RESERVE BANK OF INDIA OCCASIONAL PAPERS
Table 6: RIDF: Tranche-wise Size of Corpus
(Rs. crore)
RIDF Tranche
Year
Corpus
2
3
1995-1996
1996-1997
1997-1998
1998-1999
1999-2000
2000-2001
2001-2002
2002-2003
2003-2004
2004-2005
2005-2006
–
2,000
2,500
2,500
3,000
3,500
4,500
5,000
5,500
5,500
8,000
8,000
50,000
1
RIDF I
RIDF II
RIDF III
RIDF IV
RIDF V
RIDF VI
RIDF VII
RIDF VIII
RIDF IX
RIDF X
RIDF XI
TOTAL
Source : NABARD.
by commercial banks (36.9 per cent) and RRBs (11.6 per cent)
(Table 7).
The micro credit programme, which was formally heralded in
1992 with a modest pilot project of linking around 500 SHGs has
made rapid strides in India exhibiting considerable democratic
Table 7: Agency-wise and Year-wise KCC
(Numbers in Millions)
Year
1
1998-99
1999-2000
2000-01
2001-02
2002-03
2003-04
2004-05
2005-06
Total
Share in Total
(per cent)
Co-operative
Banks
RRB’s
Commercial
Banks
Total
2
3
4
5
0.16
3.6
5.61
5.44
4.58
4.88
3.56
2.60
30.41
0.01
0.17
0.65
0.83
0.96
1.27
1.73
1.25
6.88
0.62
1.37
2.39
3.07
2.7
3.09
4.4
4.17
21.80
0.78
5.13
8.65
9.34
8.24
9.25
9.68
8.01
59.09
51.5
11.6
36.9
100.0
Source : Report on Trend and Progress of Banking in India, RBI.
CURRENT ISSUES IN AGRICULTURE
89
functioning and group dynamism. The programme has now assumed
the form of a micro finance movement in many parts of the country.
There was a massive expansion during 2004-05 with the banking
system establishing credit linkage with 539 thousands new SHGs,
taking the cumulative number of such SHGs to 2.9 million at endMarch 2007. Banks extended loans aggregating Rs.18,041 crore at
end-March 2007 registering a growth of 58.3 per cent over the
previous year (Table 8).
Several Committees were set up from time to time to look into
the various issues relating to credit delivery for agriculture, the recent
one being Advisory Committee on Flow of Credit to Agriculture and
Related Activities from the Banking System (Chairman: Prof. V.S.
Vyas, June, 2004)3.
Table 8: SHG-Bank Linkage Programme
Year
Total SHGs Financed
by Banks
Bank Loans
Refinance
Number in ‘000
(Rs. crore)
(Rs. crore)
During the Cumulative During the Cumulative During the Cumulative
Year
Year
Year
1
1999-00
2000-01
2001-02
2002-03
2003-04
2004-05
2005-06
2006-07
2
3
4
5
6
7
81.78
(147.9)
149.05
(82.3)
197.65
(32.6)
255.88
(29.5)
361.73
(41.4)
539.39
(49.1)
620
(15.0)
686
(11.0)
114.78
(247.9)
263.83
(129.9)
461.48
(74.9)
717.36
(55.4)
1079.09
(50.4)
1,618.48
(50.0)
2,239
(38.3)
2,924
(30.6)
136
(138.6)
288
(111.8)
546
(89.6)
1,022
(87.2)
1,856
(81.6)
2,994
(61.4)
4,449
(50.3)
6,643
(47.6)
193
(238.6)
481
(149.2)
1,026
(113.3)
2,049
(99.7)
3,904
(90.5)
6,899
(76.7)
11,398
(65.2)
18,041
(58.3)
98
(88.5)
251
(156.1)
396
(57.8)
622
(57.1)
705
(13.3)
968
(37.3)
1,068
(10.3)
1,299
(21.6)
150
(188.5)
401
(167.3)
797
(98.8)
1,419
(78.0)
2,125
(49.7)
3,092
(45.5)
4,160
(34.5)
5,459
(31.2)
Notes : 1. Figures in parentheses indicate percentage variations over the previous year.
2. Data for 2006-07 are provisional.
Source : Report on Trend and Progress of Banking in India, various issues.
90
RESERVE BANK OF INDIA OCCASIONAL PAPERS
The Government has since approved rehabilitation package for
the identified districts in the States of Andhra Pradesh, Karnataka,
Kerala, and Maharashtra. Altogether, the rehabilitation package for
the four States involves a total amount of Rs.16,978 crore consisting
of Rs.10,579 crore as subsidy/grants and Rs.6,399 crore as loan.
In order to give further fillip to micro-finance movement, the
RBI has enabled Non-Governmental Organisations (NGOs) engaged
in micro-finance activities to access external commercial borrowings
(ECBs) up to US $ 5 million during a financial year for permitted
end-use, under automatic route, as an additional channel of resource
mobilisation. Besides, as a follow-up of the Union Budget proposals,
4
modalities for allowing banks to adopt the agency model for
providing credit support to rural and farm sectors and appointment of
micro-finance institutions (MFIs) as banking correspondents are also
worked out.
The Government of India announced a host of measures in June
2004 to double the flow of agricultural credit during the period 200405 to 2006-07 by all the financial institutions. Towards this end, it
was proposed to increase the agricultural credit by 30 per cent to
about Rs.1.05 lakh crore in 2004-05. While the target set for 200405 was achieved, the Union Budget for 2005-06 proposed to increase
the credit flow to agriculture by another 30 per cent by all the
institutions concerned.
The Reserve Bank has undertaken several policy initiatives in
pursuance of the objective set in the Union Budget 2004-05 to achieve
a doubling of flow of credit to agriculture. On the issue of farmers’
suicide in the country, the Government has realised that indebtedness
is one of the major reasons for suicide by farmers in the country. To
prevent and save the farmers from the clutches of private money lenders,
several measures were taken. Banks were advised in particular :
i)
To increase the agricultural credit flow at the rate of 30 per cent
per year.
ii) To restructure the outstanding debt of the farmers under the
following heads in accordance with the guidelines issued by RBI/
NABARD:
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91
•
Farmers in distress – Rescheduling/restructuring of the
outstanding loan of the farmers as on March 31, 2004 in the
districts declared as calamity – affected by the State
Government. Rescheduled loan shall be repayable over a
period of five years, at current interest rates, including an
initial moratorium of two years.
•
Farmers in arrears - Loans in default of farmers who have
become ineligible for fresh credit as their earlier debts have
been categorised as sub-standard or doubtful shall be
rescheduled as per the guidelines so that such farmers
become eligible for fresh credit.
iii) To grant a one-time settlement (OTS) including partial waiver
of interest or loan to the small and marginal farmers who have
been declared as defaulters and have become ineligible for fresh
credit. Banks have also been advised to review cases where credit
has been denied on the sole ground that a loan account was settled
through compromise or write offs.
iv) In some parts of the country, farmers face acute distress because
of the heavy burden of debt from non-institutional lenders (e.g.,
moneylenders). Banks have been permitted to advance loans to
such farmers to provide them relief from indebtedness.
v)
All the Public Sector banks have been advised to reduce their
lending rate for agriculture to a single digit rate of not more
than 9 per cent per annum on crop loans upto a ceiling of
Rs.50,000. This rate will benefit most of the crop loan account
holders and will cover almost all the small and marginal farmers.
vi) To waive margin/security requirements for agricultural loans up
to Rs.50,000 and agri-business and agri-clinics up to Rs.5 lakhs.
With a view to further increasing the flow of credit to agriculture,
several measures were announced by RBI in its Annual Policy Statement
2005-06. These include i) setting up of an Expert Group to formulate
strategy for increasing investment in agriculture, ii) conducting a survey
with the help of an outside agency to make an assessment of customer
satisfaction on credit delivery in rural areas by banks, iii) to increase the
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limit on loans to farmers through the produce marketing scheme from
Rs.5 lakh to Rs.10 lakh under priority sector lending.
Special Rehabilitation Package for the Districts Severely Affected
by Farmers’ Suicide
The incidents of suicide by farmers have been mainly reported
from the States of Andhra Pradesh, Karnataka, Maharashtra, and
Kerala. Such incidents have also been reported from the States of
Orissa, Gujarat, and Punjab. To mitigate the distress of farmers, the
Government of India decided to launch a special rehabilitation
package in 31 Districts in the States of Maharashtra, Andhra Pradesh,
Karnataka, and Kerala. The 31 Districts 5 were identified based on
the severity and magnitude of the incidence of farmers’ suicide, as
reported by the State Governments. The intent is to initially solve
the problem and correct the situation in those areas reporting high
number of suicides so that an effective dent on the problem is made
and the incidence of farmers’ suicide which is of national concern
could be curbed.
The package aims at establishing a sustainable and viable farming
and livelihood support system through debt relief to farmers,
improved supply of institutional credit, crop-centric approach to
agriculture, assured irrigation facilities, watershed management, better
extension and farming support services, improved marketing facilities
and subsidiary income opportunities through horticulture, livestock,
dairying, fisheries. For alleviating the hardships caused to debt stressed
families of farmers in the affected districts, ex-gratia assistance from
Prime Minister’s National Relief Fund (PMNRF) was also proposed.
Section IV
Issues and Concerns
Despite the significant strides achieved in terms of spread,
network and outreach of rural financial institutions, the quantum of
flow of financial resources to agriculture continues to be inadequate.
One of the major impediments constraining the adoption of new
technological practices, land improvements and building up of
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93
irrigation and marketing infrastructure has been the inadequacy of
farm investment capital. Farmers seem to borrow more short-term
credit in order to meet input needs to maintain continuity in agricultural
operations without much worrying about long-term capital formation in
the face of agricultural bountiness. It might be the case from supply side
that short-term credit bears low credit risk, lower supervision and
monitoring costs, and a better asset liability management.
The flow of investment credit to agriculture is constrained by
host of factors such as high transaction costs, structural deficiencies
in the rural credit delivery system, issues relating to credit worthiness,
lack of collaterals in view of low asset base of farmers, low volume of
loans with associated higher risks, high man power requirements, etc.
The large proportion of population in the lower strata, which is
having major share in the land holdings receives much less credit
than its requirements. The growing disparities between marginal,
small and large farmers continues to be a cause for concern. This
observed phenomenon may be attributed, inter alia, to the “risk aversion”
tendency of the bankers towards small and marginal farmers as against
the large farmers, who are better placed in offering collaterals.
Notwithstanding the rapid spread of micro-finance programme,
the distribution of SHGs is skewed across the States. More than 50
per cent of the total SHG credit linkages in the country are
concentrated in the Southern States. In the States, which have a larger
share of the poor, the coverage is comparatively low.
The tragic incidents of farmers’ suicides in some of the States
have been a matter of serious concern. A study 6 was conducted in
some regions of Andhra Pradesh to go into the causes of such tragedies
and to suggest short and long term measures to prevent such
unfortunate incidents. The study has identified crop losses,
consecutive failure of monsoon, recurrent droughts, mounting debts,
mono-cropping, land tenancy, as some of the main causes which led
many distressed farmers to commit suicide. Of the total number of
suicide cases reported, 76 per cent of the victims were dependent on
rain-fed agriculture and 78 per cent were small and marginal farmers.
An important finding of the study was that 76 to 82 per cent of the
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victim households had borrowed from non-institutional sources and
the interest rates charged on such debts ranged from 24 to 36 per
cent. The study has recommended several measures to tackle the
situation. These include improvement irrigation coverage; crop
diversification; promotion of animal husbandry as an alternate source
of income; better accessibility to institutional credit and overall
improvement of the marketing infrastructure.
Section V
Implications for the Future
Indian agriculture still suffers from: i) poor productivity, ii)
falling water levels, iii) expensive credit, iv) a distorted market, v)
many intermediaries who increase cost but do not add much value,
vi) laws that stifle private investment, vii) controlled prices, viii)
poor infrastructure, and ix) inappropriate research. Thus the supply
leading approach with mere emphasis on credit in isolation from
the above factors will not help agriculture to attain the desired
growth levels. Furthermore, agriculture being a State subject, States
are required to play a more pro-active role in agriculture
development by putting in place adequate infrastructure through
means such as RIDF.
As noted above, the share of marginal and small farmers in the
total credit (both disbursed and outstanding) has been shrinking. The
need to augment the credit flow to the lower strata of the farming
community, which has more share in the total operational land
holdings becomes all the more important.
This underscores the scope for supplementing the land inputs of
marginal and small farmers with the non-land inputs such as credit
with a view to enhancing the productivity and thereby the production
performance of Indian agriculture. In this context, the need for linking
credit supply to input use assumes importance. There is also a need
for exploring new innovations in product design and methods of
delivery, through better use of technology and related processes. It
needs to be seen whether credit going to farmers especially small
and marginal is in sufficient quantity and if so whether it will have
CURRENT ISSUES IN AGRICULTURE
95
any meaningful effect in the absence of other supportive measures
for ensuring their economic viability. In this context, creation of
production and employment opportunities in the rural sector through
public investment assumes critical importance. The SHG-Bank
Linkage model is an outstanding example of an innovation leveraging
on community-based structures and existing banking institutions.
In future, concerted efforts have to be made for enhancing the
flow of credit to critical infrastructure areas such as irrigation,
marketing and storage, etc., and also to areas such as watershed/
wasteland development, wind energy, allied activities such as poultry,
horticulture, dairying, etc.
With regard to KCCS, there is a need to upscale its outreach to
cover all the eligible farmers by creating greater awareness and giving
greater publicity to the scheme. Updation of land records and
sensitisation of bank staff through training programmes will further
add to the spread of the scheme. The exercise of preparing special
agricultural credit plans with higher component of direct finance with
a special thrust on small and marginal farmers should also receive
high priority.
The success of KCC scheme depends on less stipulated norms.
High value agriculture needs higher working capital and also entails
higher risks. Facilitating credit through processors, input dealers,
NGOs, that are vertically integrated with the farmers, including
through contract farming, for providing them critical inputs or
processing their produce, could increase the credit flow to agriculture
significantly.
Section VI
Concluding Observations
The co-operative credit structure needs revamping to improve
the efficiency of the credit delivery system in rural areas. In case of
co-operatives, the Vaidyanathan Committee concluded that having
regard to its outreach and potential, recapitalisation could be
undertaken so that the credit channels for agricultural credit which
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are presently choked could be declogged. The Committee has,
however, made it clear that recapitalisation should only be considered
if it is preceded by legal and institutional reforms by State
Governments aimed at making co-operatives democratic and vibrant
institutions running as per sound business practices, governance
standards and regulated at the upper tiers by the RBI. In this
connection, it may be suggested that the State Governments’
performance in bringing about the reforms in co-operative banks
should form one of the yardsticks for sanctioning assistance/grants
by the Central Government.
The competition and search for higher returns has made
commercial banks to explore profitable avenues and activities for
lending such as financing of contract farming, extending credit to
the value chain, financing traders and other intermediaries, which
needs to be encouraged. While the institutional systems and products
such as futures markets, and weather insurance have great potential
to minimise the risk of lending, the process of their development
needs to be carried forward.
Merging and revamping of RRBs that are predominantly located
in tribal/backward regions is seen as a potentially significant
institutional arrangement for financing the hitherto unreached
population. Such an exercise is currently on and the State
Governments and Sponsor Banks have to come together and cooperate
in this area. The experience of micro finance proved that the “poor
are bankable” and they can and do save in a variety of ways and the
creative harnessing of such savings is a key success factor. The SHGBank linkage programme is built upon the existing banking
infrastructure, it has obviated the need for the creation of a new
institutional set-up or introduction of a separate legal and regulatory
framework. Policy making bodies have an important role in creating
the enabling environment and putting appropriate policies and
interventions in position, which enable rapid up scaling of efforts
consistent with prudential practices.
There is also a need to explore the possibility how SHGs can be
induced to graduate into matured levels of enterprise. The SHG BankLinkage programme also needs to introspect whether it is sufficient
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97
for SHGs to only meet the financial needs of their members, or
whether there is a further obligation on their part to meet the nonfinancial requirements necessary for setting up business and
enterprises. In the process, ensuring the quality of SHGs warrants
priority attention. State Governments have to make critical assessment
of the manpower and skill sets available with them for forming, and
nurturing groups and handholding and maintaining them over time.
There is a need to study the best practices in the area and evolve a
policy by learning from them. Since, the access of small and marginal
farmers to credit has been constrained by their inability to offer the
collaterals, micro finance, which works on social collaterals, can go
a long way in catering to their requirements. Hence, there is need to
promote micro finance more vigorously on a widespread basis.
To conclude, an assesment of agriculture credit situation brings out
the fact that the credit delivery to the agriculture sector continues to be
inadequate. It appears that the banking system is still hesitant on various
grounds to purvey credit to small and marginal farmers. The situation
calls for concerted efforts to augment the flow of credit to agriculture,
alongside exploring new innovations in product design and methods of
delivery, through better use of technology and related processes.
Notes
1
1990s referred wherever covers the period from 1990-91 to 2001-02,
the latest year for which the data are available.
2
RIDF was setup under the initiative of the Government of India in 199596 with an initial corpus of Rs.2,000 crore to provide loans to State
Governments for financing rural infrastructure projects.
3
32 recommendations (out of 99 recommendations made by the
Committee) have been accepted and implemented by the Reserve Bank.
The major recommendations are i) A comprehensive review of
mandatory lending to agriculture by commercial banks to enlarge direct
lending programmes for greater integration of investment credit and
production credit. ii) A road map for public sector and private sector
banks to reach a level of direct lending at 13.5 per cent of net bank
credit-within the overall limit of 18.0 per cent of total agricultural
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lending -within a period of four years with an interim target of 12 per
cent in two years. Special Agricultural Credit Plan (SACP) to be
restricted to direct lending and extended to private sector banks. iii)
The share of small and marginal farmers in agricultural credit to be
raised to 40 per cent of disbursements under the Special Agricultural
Credit Plan (SACP) by the end of the Tenth Plan period. iv) Expanding
the outreach of banks in rural areas by enlarging retail lending to
agriculture, externalising retailing through corporate dealer networks,
organisational innovations, offering hedging mechanisms to the farmers,
providing legal backing to tenancy to facilitate access to credit, capacity
building of borrowers, greater use of information technology, procedural
simplifications and modifications in the service area approach. v)
Reductions in cost of agricultural credit through enhancing the cost
effectiveness of agricultural loans, especially in terms of cost of raising
funds, transaction cost and risk cost. vii) Impediments to the flow of
credit to disadvantaged borrowers to be mitigated through reduction
in cost of borrowing, revolving credit packages, procedural
simplifications, involvement of Panchayati Raj institutions and
extension of micro finance.
4
In agecny model, banks adopt the infrastructure of civil society
organisation, rural kiosks and village knowledge centres to provide credit
support to rual and farm sector
5
Maharashtra (6): Akola, Wardha, Amaravati, Buldhana, Washim, and
Yawatmal. Karnataka (6): Belgaum, Hasan, Chitradurga, Chikmagalur,
Kodagu, and Shimoga. Kerala (3) : Wayanad, Palakkad, and Kasargod.
Andhra Pradesh (16 ) : Prakasam, Guntur, Nellore, Kadapa, Chittoor,
Ananthapur, Kurnool, Adilabad, Karimnagar, Khammam, Mahabubnagar,
Medak, Nalgonda, Nizamabad, Ranga Reddy, and Warangal.
6
As per the information available in a speech delivered by the Union
Minister of Agriculture at the National Development Council, New Delhi
on June 27, 2005.
Selected References
1.
Government of India, Economic Survey, various issues.
2.
____________ (2004) Task Force on Revival of Cooperative Credit
Institutions (Chairman: A.Vaidyanathan).
CURRENT ISSUES IN AGRICULTURE
3.
99
____________ Press Releases.
4.
Mohan, Rakesh (2004) “Agricultural Credit in India: Status, Issues
and Future Agenda” RBI Bulletin, November.
5.
NABARD “Annual Report” various issues.
6.
Pawar, Sharad (2005) Speech at the Meeting of the National
Development Council, New Delhi on June 27,
7.
Reddy, Y.V. (2001) “Indian Agriculture and Reform: Concern, Issues
and Agenda” RBI Bulletin, March.
8.
Reserve Bank of India “Annual Report”, various issues
9.
________________‘‘Handbook of Statistics on the Indian Economy”,
2004-05.
10. ________________”Report on Trend and Progress of Banking in
India”, various issues.
11. _______________(2004) Report of the Advisory Committee on Flow
of Credit to Agriculture and Related Activities from the Banking System
(Chairman: Prof. Vyas)
12. ______________ (2005) Report of the Expert Group on Investment
Credit (Chairman: Y.S.P. Thorat).