Points
to data showing its diversion and uneven distribution across many
states.
Business
Standard :
Is farm credit going into the right hands? Well, the country’s apex
bank has questioned it.
In
the latest report of its Internal Working Group to review
agricultural
credit, the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) says it found that in
some states, credit disbursal to the farm sector was higher than
their agricultural gross domestic (GDP) product.
So,
indicating the possibility of diversion of credit for
non-agricultural purposes. Kerala, Tamil Nadu, Telangana, Karnataka
and Punjab came in this category.
In
Kerala and Tamil Nadu, according to the report, agricultural credit
was almost 180 per cent more than the average agriculture
GDP of the state in the years 2015, 2016 and 2017. In Andhra, the
ratio of crop loans disbursed to input requirement in 2014, 2015 and
2016 was a staggering 7.5 times more. Also raising the question on
whether the credit is being used as intended.
The
ratio of crop loans disbursed to input requirement was not only
unusually high in some states — it was also highly unevenly
distributed. In Goa, the report says, five times more farm credit was
disbursed in 2014, 2015 and 2016 than its input requirement.
It
was six times more in Kerala, four times more in Telangana, Tamil
Nadu and Uttarakhand, and three times more in Punjab.
In
contrast, Jharkhand, West Bengal, Chhattisgarh, Bihar, Odisha,
Maharashtra, Uttar Pradesh and Rajasthan were not getting credit even
to meet their basic input requirement of seed, organic manure,
fertiliser, repair, maintenance, irrigation charges, electricity,
pesticides and insecticides. Labour charges and lease rentals were
not included in this calculation.
In
2018-19, the government had fixed a target of disbursing Rs 11
trillion in agricultural credit. The achievement was 114 per cent,
according to a written reply in Parliament. In previous years, too,
banks consistently exceeded their agricultural credit disbursal
target. However, the big question is whether it is going to the right
person (s).
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