Are loan waivers a sustainable solution for farmers' distress? Analyse the challenges for small and marginal farmers in Indian agriculture and suggest measures to make farming profitable for them as well.
Manav 7 years
IAS Parliament 7 years
IAS Parliament 7 years
Key points
· The introduction of a nationwide agriculture loan waiver in 1990 had a deleterious impact on the provision of rural credit.
· Loan waiver act as a short-term pain reliever, while breeding credit indiscipline among farmers and leading to a short fall in rural credit growth.
· Loan waiver is a magical term which shifts the agrarian distress into an administration distress.
· It undermines an honest credit culture.
· It will affect state government finances by increasing the deficit and worsening the quality of expenditure.
· The possibility of implementation of loan waivers in other states will have a bearing on the national balance sheet.
· Yields on government bonds also are impacted.
· It can also lead to the crowding out of private borrowers as higher government borrowing can lead to an increase in cost of borrowing for others.
Challenges for small and marginal farmers:
· Credit facilities for small & marginal farmers compared to large & medium farmers are not properly channelled. Over 50% of small and marginal farmer loans are from Non-Banking sources.
· Increasing Fertilizer and pesticide prices causing them to adopt organic means of farming which does not yield as much as from inorganic way of farming.
· Limited availability and high cost of High yield variety seeds also hampers agriculture productivity.
· Large farmers having access to mechanised products like water pumps, consuming huge amounts of water and leaving hardly anything for small and marginal farmers.
· Gradual increase in input cost for farming.
Solutions to make farming more profitable
· Greater subsidies could be extended for the purchase of farming equipments, fertilizers, and pesticides.
· Medical insurance coverage to farmers
· Allowing marginal farmers to be paid for tilling their own fields.
· Educate farmers about the suitable crops for their land and crop diversification process.
· Ensure every subsidy reach the targeted beneficiary without leakage through the direct Benefit transfer method.
· Increasing the scope of Mahatma Gandhi National Rural Employment Guarantee Act.