Helping hands
For
agriculture reforms to happen, banks should work towards financial
reinforcement of villages. Ranbir Singh discusses ways of wooing the
Indian farmer
The Government of India, during the 70s and 80s identified
the credit needs of people living in rural India and framed policies
conducive for flow of institutional credit to the farm sector. This
period also saw an unparalleled expansion of banking services in rural
areas. While institutional set up was strengthened for flow of credit
to rural sector, banks, on the other hand, were advised to step up
direct finance to agriculture (including the allied sectors). This
was done with an objective to reach 16 per cent of their total outstanding
credit by March 1987, 17 per cent by March 1989 and 18 per cent by
March 1990 respectively. After the introduction of financial sector
reforms in the nineties, the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) directed
these banks to lend 18 per cent of net bank credit to agriculture
(including indirect finance not exceeding 4.5 per cent of total credit).
With a shift in priorities, these banks failed to see a viable proposition
in financing agriculture and as such they were able reach an estimated
outstanding agriculture credit to a level of Rs 80000 crores constituting
14 per cent to net bank credit. Since corporates view rural markets
with a huge potential for growth, the government and policy makers
should consider giving agricultural lending a boost in order to create
a huge market for other industries too. Accordingly, the new government
has announced that agriculture credit provided by banks should be
increased by 30 per cent and reach an outstanding level of Rs 1,05,000
crore by March 2005. Banks have been advised to provide farm loans
to additional five million farmers during the current financial year
2004-05. Each of the rural and semi-urban branches of the commercial
bank is expected to bring into its fold, at least 100 new farmers
during the current year. As against the ambitious announcements of
the government of doubling agriculture credit in next three years,
it is essential to take an overview of trends of flow of institution
credit to agriculture during last 5-7 years. Institutional credit
has grown at the rate of 13 to 14 per cent in the recent past. Learning
from past experiences, agriculture financing needs a marketing outlook
by the banks as agriculture is under transformation in the backdrop
of the Agreement on Agriculture (AoA) under WTO. International trade
in agricultural products is poised for faster growth and this sector
offers big opportunity for banking business, with the focus being
on retail banking in the changing competitive economic environment.
The first basic principle in marketing is scanning the business setting
under the changing political, economical, social and technological
.
contd...
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