Advertisements
Advertisements
प्रश्न
Discuss the importance of credit in rural development.
Advertisements
उत्तर १
Finance and credit are the two essential requirements for rural development. The rural areas often suffer from low income, leading to a low rate of savings. Farmers find it very difficult to increase their productivity by investing in their farmland. Further, the limited number of banks that are available in the rural areas prefer to forward credit to the farmers with large landholdings. Getting credit from banks being difficult, the small and marginal farmers fall easy prey to the money lenders. The infusion of credit is essential for the growth of the agricultural sector, leading to rural economic development. The importance of credit in rural development is highlighted in the following points:
- Credit helps farmers to commercialise their farming. In other words, commercial farming requires funds that are provided via credit. As the small and marginal farmers produce only for their subsistence, they fail to generate sufficient surplus to reinvest in their lands, leading to the degradation of the land.
- Secondly, given the long gestation period between sowing and harvesting of the crops, credit is extended to the farmers for meeting their initial requirements of farm inputs like seeds, fertilisers, etc.
- Credit saves the farmers from the vicious circle of poverty. The farmers require funds for meeting their general and specific needs. These needs are to be fulfilled via credit.
- Lastly, agriculture has always been dependent on the vagaries of the climate. In the absence of a good monsoon or crop failure, farmers are the worst hurt. Thus, in order to save them from such tragedy, crop insurance and farm credit play a vital role.
उत्तर २
The importance of credit in rural development are as follows:
- Credit for production: This includes all kinds of loans taken for farming activities, such as purchasing seeds, fertilizers, irrigation facilities, and fodder. Farmers also borrow money to pay land rent, wages of labourers, government taxes, etc. Since these expenses are directly related to production, the loans taken for such purposes are called productive credit.
- Credit for consumption: Farmers in India do not borrow only for productive purposes but also for personal consumption. In this, the credit is received for the following objectives:
- For marriage and death.
- To repay the old debts.
- For the repair, construction, and purchase of houses.
- For irrigation.
Notes
Students can refer to the provided solutions based on their preferred marks.
संबंधित प्रश्न
Explain the role of microcredit in meeting credit requirements of the poor.
Critically evaluate the role of the rural banking system in the process of rural development in India.
Which source of credit had emerged to fully integrate the formal credit system into the overall rural social and community development?
______ is the apex body which coordinates the functioning of different financial institutions working for the expansion of rural credit.
The scheme of microfinance is extended through ______.
Which one of the following is not a non-institutional source of credit?
Which of the following falls under unorganized sector?
14 major commercial banks were nationalised in ______.
National Bank for Agricultural and Rural Development (NABARD) was set up in 1982 as a/the ____________ body to coordinate the activities of all institutions involved in the rural financing system.
Read the following statements carefully and choose the correct alternatives given below:
Statement 1 - The emergence of Self-Help Groups (SHG’s) ensured the reduction in the fissures of the formal credit system.
Statement 2 - The borrowings from SHGs are mainly confined to consumption purposes by their members.
Read the following statements -Assertion (A) and Reason(R), Choose one of the correct alternatives given below:
Assertion (A): Since the default rates of farm loans have become chronically high due to multiple reasons, the rural banks are facing a lot of cash crunch.
Reason(R): Due to lack of proper storage facilities a lot of farm produce is wasted.
Identify which of the following is a source of non-institutional credit in the rural areas of India.
Discuss briefly the importance of micro-credit programmes in rural development.
Micro credit programmes play a vital role in ensuring an overall development of the rural economy as they ______.
- provide financial support
- lead to women empowerment
- enhance the reach of formal credit system
Explain the importance of credit availability to farmers in rural development.
