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Assessing Farm Loan Waivers

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January 04, 2019

What is the issue?

  • With mounting pressures from farmers, many state governments are announcing farm loan waivers.
  • It is essential, in this context, to assess the sustainability of this option as well as to look for alternative solutions.

Why are loan waivers not advisable?

  • Farm loan waivers are a quick-fix solution to farmers' distress.
  • They may temporarily alleviate the problems of those farmers with access to formal banking.
  • It ignores the real needs of the many poor farmers who rely on moneylenders.
  • They also do not address the fundamental problems of Indian agriculture such as rising costs and falling profitability.
  • Also, waivers destroy the country’s credit culture as certain borrowers tend to default in anticipation of the waiver.
  • Fresh lending to defaulting borrowers is stalled.
  • As, banking regulations prohibit disbursement of fresh loans to defaulters unless the loans are restructured.
  • Significantly, governments fund loan waivers through borrowings.
  • This, in turn, results in increased sovereign indebtedness, higher interest expenses and deteriorating fiscal deficit.
  • Consolidated fiscal deficit is already under stress due to increase in crude oil prices and populist schemes ahead of general elections.
  • Besides these, farm loan waivers crowd out agriculture-related investments in areas such as irrigation and research.

What are the sustainable mechanisms?

  • Institutional mechanisms like crop insurance and interest subvention are far more effective in tackling farm loan crisis.
  • State Bank of India has recommended an income support scheme for small and marginal farmers in the place of loan waivers.
  • It has estimated the annual cost to be Rs. 50,000 crore or 0.3% of GDP.
  • This is just a fraction of the Rs. 1.9 lakh crore farm loan waivers announced since April 2017.
  • Income support makes direct benefit transfer (DBT) to targeted recipients.
  • It could also increase banking penetration in rural India.
  • E.g. Telengana has launched the ‘farmer investment scheme’
  • Under this, each farmer receives Rs. 8,000 per acre payable in two equal instalments ahead of the kharif and rabi season.
  • This is to meet their seed, fertiliser, pesticide and field-preparation expenses.

What can the government do for finances?

  • CPSE - The government must stop the divestment of central public sector enterprises (CPSEs).
  • It may instead raise substantial funds by rationalising CPSE balance sheets.
  • CPSEs may dispose the low yielding assets along with the vast surplus property holdings to reduce their debt.
  • They can enhance their dividend and tax-paying ability and improve their return on assets and valuation.
  • So by streamlining CPSEs’ balance sheets, the government will be able to address the farm loan crisis without impairing the fiscal deficit.
  • Bonds - The government can issue callable deep discount bonds (CDDBs).
  • Deep discount bonds are bonds whose interest accumulates during the tenor of the instrument.
  • These are paid at maturity along with the principal repayment.
  • The 'callable' nature of CDDBs allows the government to pay it off earlier than the maturity date.
  • The government may issue CDDBs of multiple tenors, like 5-year, 10-year, and 15-year, targeted at retail and institutional investors.
  • The issue of CDDBs will enable the government save on cash interest outgo during the tenor of the instrument.
  • It can thereby moderate the consolidated fiscal deficit.
  • Along with these, large-scale investments in agricultural storage, processing, marketing, transportation, financing and insurance are important.

 

Source: BusinessLine

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