Paper
Rural Credit Delivery System in Maharashtra : A Step Towards Rejuvenation
How to revitalize rural credit markets?
26 pages
This paper reviews the rural credit delivery system in the state of Maharashtra in India. It also provides a brief overview on the rural banking sector reforms in general, and on the reform initiatives in cooperative sector, in particular.
The paper studies and presents:
- Rural banking sector reforms;
- Reforms in the cooperative sector;
- Rural credit scenario in Maharashtra, with focus on:
- Outlays of annual credit plans and potential linked credit plans;
- Progress of various rural financial institutions (RFIs);
- Distributional aspect of credit, microfinance or linkage of bank credit with various self-help groups.
- Microcredit innovations in Maharashtra.
Further, the paper observes that:
- The new generation lending institutions, such as Self Help Groups (SHGs), have shown higher rates of recovery and lower transaction costs than other lending institutions;
- Credit cooperatives and commercial banks need to study the mechanism of new generation lending institutions to better structure their loan recovery and interest rate structure;
- RFIs in Maharashtra need to take more stringent and cohesive measures for loan recovery to control high levels of non-performing assets.
The paper concludes that:
- Rural credit delivery system can be rejuvenated by tackling high transaction costs and poor repayment performance;
- More fiscal jurisprudence reserving exemplary punishment for willful defaults, needs to be exercised;
- The focus should be on strategies that are required for tackling issues such as sustainability and viability, operational efficiency, recovery performance, small farmer coverage and balanced sectoral development.
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