Loans | SabrangIndia News Related to Human Rights Wed, 16 Sep 2020 13:56:46 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.2.2 https://sabrangindia.in/wp-content/uploads/2023/06/Favicon_0.png Loans | SabrangIndia 32 32 Don’t demand loans from those keeping home fires burning: National women’s organisations https://sabrangindia.in/dont-demand-loans-those-keeping-home-fires-burning-national-womens-organisations/ Wed, 16 Sep 2020 13:56:46 +0000 http://localhost/sabrangv4/2020/09/16/dont-demand-loans-those-keeping-home-fires-burning-national-womens-organisations/ National organisations come to the defence of SHG women, demanding the withdrawal of decision to collect outstanding loans from the marginalised.

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Image Courtesy:imagogg.org

Six national women’s organisations on September 12 wrote a letter to the Minister of Rural Development Shri Narendra Singh Tomar demanding an immediate withdrawal of the government decision of collecting the outstanding loans from women in Self-Help Groups (SHGs.)

Members of the All India Progressive Women’s Association, the All India Democratic Women’s Association, the National Federation Of Indian Women and others asked for a delay in the payment of such loans and interests, instead of the aforementioned decision that could lead to tremendous harassment of the SHG women not only by the banks but also by the Microfinancers.

The letter reminded that the issue of NPAs in bank loans to SHGs comes under the government’s Deendayal Antyodaya Yojana-National Rural Livelihoods Mission (NRLM,) that provides support to SHGs, including in case of bank linkages. However, the letter said that the NRLM was reviewed without taking into account the unprecedented economic devastation caused due to the coronavirus pandemic.

Originally, the NRLM planned to cover 7 crore rural poor households in the country through SHGs and enable them to increase household incomes.

“It is ironical that now the State Rural Livelihood Missions (SRLMs) have been told to ‘work out the amount to be deposited with banks before Sept 20 to avoid the account becoming irregular/NPA’. Your Ministry has asked SRLMs to ‘monitor the status of NPA district-wise’ and take ‘corrective measures’ to ‘recover overdue/outstanding dues’.” said the letter.

Moreover, newspaper reports showed that the outstanding bank loans of about 54.57 lakh SHGs across the country amounted to about Rs. 91,130 crores by March-end of which Rs 2,168 crores – 2.37 percent – were NPAs. Members pointed out that the government did not take any steps to provide livelihood opportunities during the lockdown. They said that the government should have waived the loans taken before the pandemic and provided new collateral and interest free loans to SHG women.

“SHG women are barely surviving and managing to keep the home fires burning,” they said.

Thus, the letter criticised the Centre for giving various concessions to the corporate sector including writing off of huge NPAs while the Rural Ministry targeted SHG women for recovery.

Related:

Lockdown benefits! SHGs involved in MFP collection: Chhattisgarh
Will Anganwadi workers ever get their due?
73.2% Of Rural Women Workers Are Farmers, But Own 12.8% Land Holdings
If Indian Women Eat With Their Families, It Can Change India

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Wait, Despair and Hope: Fate of Daily Wage Labourers in Punjab https://sabrangindia.in/wait-despair-and-hope-fate-daily-wage-labourers-punjab/ Thu, 16 May 2019 03:59:38 +0000 http://localhost/sabrangv4/2019/05/16/wait-despair-and-hope-fate-daily-wage-labourers-punjab/ Lack of jobs and demonetisation have crippled the lives of daily wagers, whose families now depend on micro loans to run households. Punjab, once one of the prosperous states in India, is now reeling under a crisis. Lack of jobs and demonetisation have crippled the lives of daily wagers, whose families now depend on micro […]

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Lack of jobs and demonetisation have crippled the lives of daily wagers, whose families now depend on micro loans to run households.

Punjab, once one of the prosperous states in India, is now reeling under a crisis. Lack of jobs and demonetisation have crippled the lives of daily wagers, whose families now depend on micro loans to run households. They squarely blame the central government for their plight. NewsClick talked to daily wage workers in Patiala to find out what they feel about politics and elections.

Courtesy: News Click

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Public Sector Banks’ Bad Loans More Than Doubled Over Two Years To 2017 https://sabrangindia.in/public-sector-banks-bad-loans-more-doubled-over-two-years-2017/ Mon, 14 May 2018 09:51:33 +0000 http://localhost/sabrangv4/2018/05/14/public-sector-banks-bad-loans-more-doubled-over-two-years-2017/   New Delhi: Indian public sector banks’ (PSB) bad loans soared 1.5 times, from Rs 2.67 lakh crore ($39.99 billion) on March 31, 2015, to Rs 6.89 lakh crore ($103.21 billion)–an amount that could electrify half of India’s households–on June 30, 2017, according to this reply to the Lok Sabha (lower house of parliament) by Shiv Pratap Shukla, […]

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New Delhi: Indian public sector banks’ (PSB) bad loans soared 1.5 times, from Rs 2.67 lakh crore ($39.99 billion) on March 31, 2015, to Rs 6.89 lakh crore ($103.21 billion)–an amount that could electrify half of India’s households–on June 30, 2017, according to this reply to the Lok Sabha (lower house of parliament) by Shiv Pratap Shukla, minister of state for finance, on April 6, 2018.
 
Of the 21 public sector banks, 11 had non-performing assets (NPAs) greater than 15% of total assets, as per data cited by the minister. In light of the Rs 11,000 crore fraud at Punjab National Bank, the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) has placed all 11 under scrutiny, The Financial Express reported on April 9, 2018. Five more PSBs are expected to join the ranks. Demands that PSBs be privatised have also been reinvigorated since the fraud was unearthed in February this year.
 
Among other corrective action, the RBI will restrict their lending activities, opening up of new branches and recruitment.
 
Indian companies and individuals owed Rs 4.1 lakh crore ($61.41 billion) to PSBs in overdue loans in the “non-priority sector”–mainly corporate lending, car loans, personal finance, credit card dues and home loans–as of March 2016. These NPAs, if fully recovered, would suffice to pay off distressed farm loans across eight states, with a third (32%) still left over, IndiaSpend had reported on July 31, 2017.
 
In the decade to 2016, bad loans in the non-priority sector rose more than 22-fold (2166%) from when they were valued at Rs 18,300 crore in 2006, the report said. During the same period, the sector’s share in public sector banks’ NPAs rose from 44.2% to 76.7%. This growth was particularly pronounced after 2011, when it became 12-fold (1110%) over five years.
 
NPA Ratio Of Public Sector Banks
Public Sector BanksNPA Ratio (In %)Put Under Prompt Corrective Actions By RBI
Allahabad Bank15.46Yes
Andhra Bank14.26Expected to be
Bank of Baroda13.22No
Bank of India15.49Yes
Bank of Maharashtra19.05Yes
Canara Bank10.58Expected to be
Central Bank of India18.08Yes
Corporation Bank15.92Yes
Dena Bank19.56Yes
IDBI Bank Limited24Yes
IndianBank6.4No
Indian Overseas Bank22.74Yes
Oriental Bank of Commerce16.95Yes
Punjab & Sind Bank10.95Expected to be
Punjab National Bank12.88Expected to be
State Bank of India11.8No
Syndicate Bank10.91No
UCO Bank23.29Yes
Union Bank of India13.54Expected to be
United Bank of India20.1Yes
VijayaBank6.17No
Source: Lok Sabha and Financial Express; Data as of December 31, 2017,
 
(Note: The numbers related to electrification are arrived at by multiplying Rs 3,000 per household, the amount the central government is providing for electrification under the Saubhagya scheme, with the overall number of households in the country.)

This article was first published on indiaspend.com.

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Prevent Price Crash During Bumper Harvest to Protect Farmers and Prevent Distress https://sabrangindia.in/prevent-price-crash-during-bumper-harvest-protect-farmers-and-prevent-distress/ Tue, 27 Jun 2017 11:55:11 +0000 http://localhost/sabrangv4/2017/06/27/prevent-price-crash-during-bumper-harvest-protect-farmers-and-prevent-distress/ Image Courtesy: ahlu-india.com It is the Price-crash whenever there is a bumper harvest that Causes Farmer Distress, not Bad Loans The question of farm-loan waiver that is being demanded by the peasantry is much misunderstood. Such a waiver, it is argued by critics, would vitiate the credit-culture in the country: people would stop repaying loans […]

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Image Courtesy: ahlu-india.com

It is the Price-crash whenever there is a bumper harvest that Causes Farmer Distress, not Bad Loans

The question of farm-loan waiver that is being demanded by the peasantry is much misunderstood. Such a waiver, it is argued by critics, would vitiate the credit-culture in the country: people would stop repaying loans henceforth in expectation of waivers on them. Since the UPA government had waived farm-loans a few years ago and now again there is a demand for a farm-loan waiver, peasants, they contend, are getting into a habit of not paying loans and demanding periodic waivers instead. Somebody, it is further added, has to bear the burden of the loan after all; and if the peasants do not do so, then the government budget gets saddled with this burden, to the detriment of society as a whole. And so on.

Fallacious Understanding
All these arguments however, even if we assume that they are advanced in good faith, are based on a completely fallacious understanding. To see this, let us first examine how credit circulates in the economy. A peasant, let us assume, takes Rs 100 worth of loans for growing a crop whose value, for simplicity, is also Rs 100 at base prices. When the peasant goes to the market to sell the crop it is bought by the trader who takes a loan of Rs 100 from the bank for doing so; and this money in turn, which constitutes the peasant’s sale proceeds, is handed back to the bank by the peasant. The bank’s outstanding credit therefore continues to remain at Rs 100, but the identity of the borrower changes, as this credit circulates: originally it was the peasant who owed the bank Rs 100 but now the peasant is free of the loan, while it is the trader who comes to owe the bank Rs 100.
During this entire process of circulation of credit, however, there is always a stock of commodities of equal value against the outstanding credit. When the peasant takes credit to buy inputs, then obviously this stock of inputs is the equivalent of the credit taken; later the stock of produced commodity with the peasant becomes the equivalent of the credit taken; and still later the stock of commodity with the trader becomes the equivalent of the credit taken. As the credit circulates, the commodity form and the commodity location change; but there is always an equivalent stock in value terms. There is therefore no question of banks being “stressed” (except in cases of drought and other natural calamities).

And when the stock of the commodity is finally sold to the consumer (who let us assume pays for it out of his/her income), the sale proceeds flow back to the bank in the form of loan repayment. Hence in the absence of natural calamities, if base prices continue to prevail, there is no reason why there should be any demand for loan waiver and any “stress” on the part of the banks. Bank credit in other words should be self-liquidating in the absence of shocks to output and prices.

The primary reason why loan-waiver is being demanded at present is not an output fall owing to any natural calamity; on the contrary this has been a bumper harvest year. It is the price-fall on account of the bumper harvest that underlies this demand, ie, because the base prices that had been assumed to prevail in the above example do not prevail. There is instead a price collapse. Let us see in terms of the above example what happens in such a case.

Typically in agriculture, since the bulk of the peasantry lacks stock-holding capacity, when output increases by say 10 per cent, prices collapse by more than 10 per cent, so that the total value of the crop falls for the producers. (The opposite, significantly, does not happen for the producers when there is a fall in output). In the above example therefore, against the credit of Rs 100 taken by the peasant, the value of the output sold by the peasant to the trader would be only, say, Rs 70. While the bank gives Rs 70 to the trader as a loan, which the latter uses to buy the crop, and this amount flows back to the bank through the peasant, Rs 30 does not flow back. The peasant has no means of paying back Rs 30 and the bank is saddled with a non-performing asset, viz, its loan to the peasant.

But while the trader has paid Rs 70 to the peasant for the crop, the amount for which he would sell the crop is not Rs 70, but more, in fact not less than the original Rs 100. The fall in crop prices whenever there is a bumper harvest is not passed on, certainly not fully passed on, to the consumers. When there was a crash in coffee prices for the growers in Kerala for instance, there was not an iota of a fall in the prices of instant coffee in the retail market. Today there is a crash in groundnut prices in Modi’s own home state, Gujarat, but this has not meant any fall in the price of groundnut oil for the consumers. Somewhere between the producer and the consumer, the effect of this fall is absorbed as larger profits. And I use the generic term “trader”, momentarily, to depict this beneficiary.

For such a trader therefore, while the loan from the bank has been Rs 70 in the above example, the value of the commodity stock held is Rs 100. Hence the fact that the peasant has a deficit of Rs 30 (and correspondingly, the bank has a problem of non-repayment of loan to the tune of Rs 30), has as its counterpart an improvement in the net worth position of the trader exactly to the same extent. But the bank cannot touch the trader to recover its loan; the peasant cannot touch the trader to obtain the resources for paying back his loan. (In fact the problem arose precisely because the peasant got a lower price from the trader, ie, could not get adequate resources from the latter for paying back the loan.)

The total outstanding credit in this case too is Rs 100, of which Rs 70 is advanced to the trader and Rs 30 (still unpaid) to the peasant. The commodity stocks with the trader still have a value of Rs 100 (at which they would be sold to the consumer). But the bank has no claims on these commodity stocks: its claims amount only to Rs 70. What we call the problem of non-repayment therefore is nothing else but a transfer from the peasant to the trader. The bank’s portfolio suffers because of this transfer. Now if the bank presses the peasant for a repayment of the remaining Rs 30, then the peasant will become destitute and may even commit suicide, as has been happening of late. Peasant resistance to waive the loan is an attempt to prevent such a fate from overtaking the peasant.

Several conclusions immediately follow from this simple illustration: first, non-repayment by the peasant is not the consequence of any bad “credit habit” on the part of the peasant. Second, even if there is a loan waiver now which makes the peasant free of all obligations to the bank, the same situation will again arise in the future. The fact that the demand for a loan waiver keeps getting repeated is not because the peasants, having benefited from it once, keep wanting to repeat it, ie, not because of greed or avarice on their part, but because the institutional structure in the economy is such they have to experience a price-crash whenever there is a bumper harvest. Third, the bank is faced with a bad debt not because the money it had loaned has vanished into thin air, but because it has got transferred into the pockets of traders which cannot be touched either by the peasants (who have no capacity to do so) or by the banks (who have no authority to do so).

Breakdown of Institutional Mechanisms
Those who are opposed to what they see as the peasants’ “habit” of asking for loan waivers, should rather insist that there should be appropriate institutions to prevent price-crashes in the event of bumper harvests. Prior to the implementation of neo-liberal policies, the country had in fact set up such an institutional mechanism. The Food Corporation of India announced support and procurement prices for 22 crops, and carried out procurement operations to make those prices effective. In the case of commercial crops there were several Commodity Boards, such as the Tea Board, the Coffee Board, and the Rubber Board, which carried out a marketing function that included intervening in the market in the event of a price-crash.

These interventions left much to be desired. Often the FCI would not be there in time to make the purchase. Often the poor peasants and even lower middle peasants, who had the least holding capacity, would have to sell their crop at throw-away prices before the FCI agents turned up in the market. Nonetheless there was at least an understanding of the problem and some effort at dealing with it. With neo-liberalism however there is a “rolling back”. True, the FCI still exists and intervenes in the market for several crops, though the crops it covers are much less than what the peasants need. (And sticking to the WTO agreement may even prevent such intervention in the coming days). But the marketing function of the Commodity Boards has completely ceased. And cash crops which such Boards deal with are the ones where the need for credit is most acute.

It is the breaking down of this institutional mechanism that is responsible for the peasants’ distress and periodic demands for loan-waivers. The beneficiaries of this breaking down have been what I have called “traders” till now, but these “traders” now include multinational agri-business, and the domestic corporate-financial oligarchy, all of whom have entered the market for agricultural goods. Not only must the peasants get a loan-waiver to tide over their present predicament, but they need to be provided price-support against future crashes by re-erecting a mechanism that neo-liberalism has destroyed.

Courtesy: People's Democracy

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Low on jobs, weak on industrial production, and high on bad loans. What’s India celebrating? https://sabrangindia.in/low-jobs-weak-industrial-production-and-high-bad-loans-whats-india-celebrating/ Mon, 17 Oct 2016 05:00:46 +0000 http://localhost/sabrangv4/2016/10/17/low-jobs-weak-industrial-production-and-high-bad-loans-whats-india-celebrating/ The world’s fastest-growing major economy may have hit an air pocket. India’s 7.6% annual growth in the 2016 fiscal year has made it a standout performer amid a sluggish global economic environment. So far, this year, the GDP numbers look good and a bountiful monsoon will help further. Benign global oil prices will also add to the […]

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The world’s fastest-growing major economy may have hit an air pocket.

India’s 7.6% annual growth in the 2016 fiscal year has made it a standout performer amid a sluggish global economic environment. So far, this year, the GDP numbers look good and a bountiful monsoon will help further. Benign global oil prices will also add to the headline GDP number since India imports over 75% of its crude oil requirement.

But there are some reasons to worry. Data released over the last few weeks show that the bad-loan mess in the banking system remains serious, industrial production has fallen for two straight months, and unemployment is at a five-year high.
 

Industrial production

The index of industrial production, which measures the country’s factory output, fell for the second straight month in August, Central Statistics Office data showed on Oct. 10. The index fell 0.7% in August, following a 2.5% drop in July. Manufacturing and mining growth contracted in August, indicating that a recovery is still far away. In the first five months of the current fiscal year (April-August), the IIP contracted 0.3% compared to an expansion of 4.1% in the same period a year ago.

“Manufacturing performance continues to face headwinds from subdued business and investment environment,” the Reserve Bank of India said in its bi-monthly monetary policy review statement on Oct. 04.
 

Bad loans

Former RBI governor Raghuram Rajan’s goal of purging Indian banks of toxic loans remains unfulfilled, new data shows. On October 10, Reutersreported that non-performing assets in the Indian banking system had shot up from $121 billion in December 2015 to $138 billion in June 2016, according to RBI data. The central bank has given banks a March 2017 deadline to make provisions for bad loans. So, many big lenders have posted massive losses in recent quarters. Yet, the bad-loan pile is only getting bigger.

Meanwhile, the government is now also planning to consolidate public sector banks to make the system more efficient. It will soon merge two large banks based in Mumbai, Reuters reported on October 11.
 

Out of work

In 2015-16, the unemployment rate in Asia’s third-largest economy stood at a five-year high, according to a Labour Bureau report dated September 15. This is critical at a time when the Modi government is pushing its ambitious “Make in India” initiative to boost manufacturing and job creation. Employment was a top item in the election manifesto of Modi’s Bharatiya Janata Party. The all-India survey by the Labour Bureau showed that 77% of the households that participated in it did not have a regular salaried or wage-earning member.

This article first appeared on Quartz.

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Garment Workers Brave Protest Compels Backdown on PF Norms https://sabrangindia.in/garment-workers-brave-protest-compels-backdown-pf-norms/ Wed, 20 Apr 2016 09:20:20 +0000 http://localhost/sabrangv4/2016/04/20/garment-workers-brave-protest-compels-backdown-pf-norms/ Front Image courtesy Awakening Hudugru It was the protests by Bengaluru’s Garment Workers that compelled the Modi Government to push back its controversial and decision or bid to tighten Provident Fund loan and withdrawals A big salute to them, says this Facebook posting by Vinay Sreenivasa All workers and employees, especially white collar workers workers in the Information Technology […]

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Front Image courtesy Awakening Hudugru

It was the protests by Bengaluru’s Garment Workers that compelled the Modi Government to push back its controversial and decision or bid to tighten Provident Fund loan and withdrawals
A big salute to them, says this Facebook posting by Vinay Sreenivasa

All workers and employees, especially white collar workers workers in the Information Technology and BT industry have to thank the brave garment workers of Bengaluru who withstood police violence and widespread slander to fight for their rights. If the recently introduced Rules regarding Provident Fund (PF) do get withdrawn it will be hugely to the credit of  these brave-hearts.

The Economic Times and several other newspapers have reported this backtracking by the Modi led NDA II government. The ET said, that it was in  February, the ministry had issued a notification restricting 100 per cent withdrawal of provident fund by members after unemployment of more than two months, among others. 

Following the concerns raised by trade unions and other stakeholders, the ministry decided to keep the notification in abeyance till April 30. Its implementation has been again deferred till July 31, as per a Labour Ministry statement. Facing protest, the government today kept in abeyance for three more months the proposed move to bar withdrawal of employer's contribution to the provident fund corpus until the employee attains the age of 58 years. "The notification (tightening PF withdrawal norms) will be kept in abeyance for three months till July 31, 2016. We will discuss this issue with the stakeholders," Labour Minister Bandaru Dattatreya told reporters.

But it was this first protest, braving lathis and police repression, that brought out garment workers to the streets of Bengaluru that influenced the government’s decision.
 
 
See also
New PF withdrawal norms put on hold till July 31 after protests

 
 
 

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