Government Strengthens Institutional Credit Framework for Agriculture and Allied Sectors
What happened
The Indian government has reinforced institutional credit mechanisms for agriculture and allied sectors, focusing on expanding Kisan Credit Card coverage, strengthening NABARD refinancing, and scaling agricultural cooperative credit. Key targets include extending KCC to all eligible farmers, boosting short-term credit flow, and integrating allied sectors like fisheries and animal husbandry. NABARD remains central, with its refinancing mandate expanding to cover FPOs, SHGs, and rural infrastructure under schemes aligned with the Union Budget 2025-26 priorities.
Why it matters
India's agricultural credit architecture rests on a three-tier cooperative structure — Primary Agricultural Credit Societies (PACS) at the base, District Central Cooperative Banks (DCCBs) in the middle, and State Cooperative Banks (StCBs) at the apex — with NABARD providing refinancing at the top. The government periodically strengthens this framework because informal moneylenders still account for significant rural debt, trapping farmers in cycles of indebtedness.
The Kisan Credit Card (KCC) scheme, operational since 1998, provides revolving short-term credit for crop cultivation, post-harvest expenses, and allied activities. Its recent expansion to fisheries and animal husbandry farmers marked a structural broadening of institutional credit reach. The Modified Interest Subvention Scheme (MISS) makes KCC credit available at 4% per annum for loans up to ₹3 lakh, with timely repayment incentives built in.
NABARD's role has evolved beyond refinancing: it now directly lends to FPOs under the 10,000 FPO scheme, supports Watershed Development, and channels infrastructure investment through RIDF. The Agriculture Infrastructure Fund (AIF) — ₹1 lakh crore — adds a post-harvest credit dimension. For allied sectors, credit gaps remain severe: animal husbandry receives less than 5% of total agricultural credit. Bridging this gap through institutional channels is central to India's goal of doubling farmers' income and building climate-resilient agriculture.
The Kisan Credit Card (KCC) scheme, operational since 1998, provides revolving short-term credit for crop cultivation, post-harvest expenses, and allied activities. Its recent expansion to fisheries and animal husbandry farmers marked a structural broadening of institutional credit reach. The Modified Interest Subvention Scheme (MISS) makes KCC credit available at 4% per annum for loans up to ₹3 lakh, with timely repayment incentives built in.
NABARD's role has evolved beyond refinancing: it now directly lends to FPOs under the 10,000 FPO scheme, supports Watershed Development, and channels infrastructure investment through RIDF. The Agriculture Infrastructure Fund (AIF) — ₹1 lakh crore — adds a post-harvest credit dimension. For allied sectors, credit gaps remain severe: animal husbandry receives less than 5% of total agricultural credit. Bridging this gap through institutional channels is central to India's goal of doubling farmers' income and building climate-resilient agriculture.
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