NABARD Grade A Current Affairs — 4 July 2026

2 topics · NABARD Grade A · 4 July 2026
NABARD plans to give Agricultural Credit a Fresh Boost with Revised Unit Cost Framework
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NABARD plans to give Agricultural Credit a Fresh Boost with Revised Unit Cost Framework

What happened

NABARD convened the State Level Unit Cost Committee (SLUCC) for FY 2026-27 at its New Delhi Regional Office, chaired by DGM Samir Athalye. The committee approved revised unit costs and included new investment activities under Delhi's State Unit Cost framework. Stakeholders included RBI, SLBC, Govt of NCT Delhi, Lead District Managers, Krishi Vigyan Kendra Ujwa, and Delhi State Cooperative Bank. The revision aims to align credit benchmarks with current market prices, technology, and production practices for farm and allied sectors.

Why it matters

Unit costs under NABARD's framework are scientifically determined benchmark estimates that tell banks how much it costs to create a specific productive agricultural asset — be it a dairy unit, irrigation pump, or polyhouse. Without these benchmarks, banks either under-finance (leaving the farmer asset-poor) or over-finance (creating NPAs). NABARD revises these annually through the State Level Unit Cost Committee (SLUCC), a multi-stakeholder body that includes technical institutions like Krishi Vigyan Kendras, government departments, commercial banks via SLBC, cooperative banks, and Lead District Managers.

The significance here is structural: investment credit — long-term credit for asset creation — is the backbone of farm productivity growth, but it has historically lagged behind crop loans. Realistic unit costs unlock term loans under schemes like NABARD's refinance windows and RKVY. When unit costs are outdated, project reports become financially unviable and banks reject loan applications.

The Delhi SLUCC meeting is notable because NCT Delhi, though small in agriculture, has a dense peri-urban farming ecosystem — floriculture, dairy, horticulture — where market prices change rapidly. Including new investment activities (e.g., precision farming technologies, emerging allied sector activities) signals NABARD's push toward diversification and agri-entrepreneurship, not just traditional crop financing. This directly feeds into India's goal of doubling farm income and expanding institutional credit coverage.
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Mahindra Insurance Brokers and BigHaat join hands to empower the lives of the farmer community
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Mahindra Insurance Brokers and BigHaat join hands to empower the lives of the farmer community

What happened

Mahindra Insurance Brokers Limited (MIBL) and BigHaat, an agri-tech platform, have partnered to expand insurance penetration among India's farming community. BigHaat connects over 2 million farmers across 18 states. The collaboration aims to distribute crop, health, and livestock insurance products through BigHaat's digital agri-platform. This aligns with the Government of India's broader agenda of deepening insurance access in rural India and supports IRDAI's vision of 'Insurance for All by 2047'.

Why it matters

India's agricultural insurance penetration remains critically low despite schemes like Pradhan Mantri Fasal Bima Yojana (PMFBY). Structural barriers — low financial literacy, limited last-mile distribution, and distrust of formal insurance — leave most farmers unprotected against climate shocks, crop failures, and livestock losses. The MIBL-BigHaat partnership attempts to bridge this gap through a phagocytic model: BigHaat's existing agri-tech infrastructure (seed, fertiliser, advisory services for 2 million+ farmers) acts as a distribution channel, while MIBL brings licensed insurance brokerage expertise. This is significant for several reasons. First, it uses an agri-ecosystem touchpoint farmers already trust — buying seeds and inputs — to cross-sell insurance, reducing acquisition friction. Second, it supports IRDAI's stated target of 'Insurance for All by 2047' and directly feeds into NABARD's financial inclusion mandate. Third, for UPSC purposes, it exemplifies how public-private partnership and fintech/agri-tech convergence can address SDG-2 (Zero Hunger) and SDG-1 (No Poverty) goals. The model also reduces dependence on intermediaries like Common Service Centres. However, challenges remain: basis risk in parametric products, low claims literacy, and digital exclusion of marginal farmers in remote areas.
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