Why in the news?
- The Union Finance Minister urged rural banks to enhance the disbursement of agricultural credit to meet the increasing financial needs of a rapidly transforming rural India.
Agricultural Credit in India
- What is it?:
- Agricultural credit refers to financial support extended to farmers for agricultural and allied activities such as crop production, purchase of inputs, and investment in farm machinery and infrastructure.
- It plays a crucial role in ensuring timely availability of capital, enhancing productivity, and reducing dependence on moneylenders.
- Importance of Agricultural Credit:
- Helps improve capital formation and modernisation of agriculture.
- Reduces dependence on informal lenders.
- Enables purchase of inputs and equipment.
- Facilitates risk management through schemes like KCC and crop insurance.
- Institutional Structure for Agricultural Credit:
- Cooperative Credit Institutions: Three tier system
- Cooperatives provide short- and long-term credit, often refinanced by NABARD.
- Primary Level: Primary Agricultural Credit Societies (PACS)- village level.
- Intermediate Level: District Central Cooperative Banks (DCCBs).
- State Level: State Cooperative Banks (SCBs).
- Regional Rural Banks:
- Serve small and marginal farmers.
- Provide short- and medium-term agricultural loans.
- Commercial Banks:
- Major source of institutional agricultural credit today.
- Promote direct lending and crop loans under schemes like Kisan Credit Card (KCC).
- National Bank for Agriculture and Rural Development(NABARD):
- Apex institution for agricultural and rural credit.
- Provides refinance support to RRBs and cooperative banks.
- Manages Long Term Rural Credit Fund and other refinance schemes.
- Cooperative Credit Institutions: Three tier system
- Major Government Schemes:
- Kisan Credit Card (KCC):
- Provide short-term credit for farmers.
- As of March 2024, 7.75 crore accounts with ₹9.81 lakh crore outstanding
- Pradhan Mantri Kisan Samman Nidhi (PM-KISAN):
- Direct income support
- ₹6,000 per year in three instalments
- Pradhan Mantri Fasal Bima Yojana (PMFBY):
- Crop insurance Scheme
- Premium: 2% (Kharif Crops), 1.5% (Rabi Crops), 5% (Horticulture Crops)
- Interest Subvention Scheme (ISS):
- Subsidy on crop loan interest
- 2–3% to promote timely repayment.
- AtmaNirbhar Bharat – KCC Saturation Drive:
- Cover 2.5 crore new KCC holders
- Provides ₹2 lakh crore credit boost under the drive
- Other Initiatives:
- Digitisation of PACS and integration with Core Banking Systems.
- Doubling of farmers’ income target through enhanced credit access.
- Credit guarantee schemes to support agri-startups and FPOs (Farmer Producer Organisations).
- Strengthening of RRBs through recapitalisation and consolidation drives.
- Kisan Credit Card (KCC):
- Challenges
- Regional disparity: Higher credit flow in southern and western states.
- Limited reach: Small and marginal farmers face exclusion due to collateral requirements.
- Reliance on Non-Institutional Credit: Limited Institutional credit penetration forces rural marginal farmers to rely on Money lenders.
- High non-performing assets (NPAs) in cooperative and RRB sectors.
- Dependence on short-term loans: Constrains capital formation.
- Delay in credit delivery & procedural complexity.
- Way Forward:
- Enhance credit reach to tenants and small farmers via JLGs/SHGs.
- Focus on long-term investment credit for capital formation.
- Improve digital access and financial literacy among rural farmers.
- Promote inclusive growth by balancing regional disparities.
- Strengthen cooperative credit through structural and governance reforms.