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Nearly four in ten of 8,007 Indian farmers who committed suicide in 2015 were in debt, compared to two in ten in 2014; more rural households went into debt over 11 years; and the average rural household had borrowed Rs 1.03 lakh, according to an IndiaSpend analysis of government data.
As eight states, including the BJP-run, largely agrarian states of Chhattisgarh, Madhya Pradesh (MP) and Rajasthan go to the polls this year, we investigate, in a two-part series, how rural debt, distress and deaths are growing nationwide.
In an era of increasingly uncertain weather and suicides on farms, attributed to climate change and likely to worsen, the rural economic downturn is likely to be an important issue in the general elections of 2019, and it is unlikely Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s promise that farmers will double their incomes by 2022 will be kept, as IndiaSpend reported in December 2016.
Chhattisgarh, MP and Rajasthan had a collective rural population of 123.6 million in 2011, equivalent to the current population of Mexico, the world’s 11th most populated country. Agricultural growth rates in all three states have declined, Hindustan Times reported in December 2017, while farmer unrest roiled MP and Rajasthan, as farmers struggling with falling crop prices demanded loan waivers and government guarantees for higher prices.
One in three Indian rural households were in debt in 2013, an increase from 26.5 percent in 2002. The average debt per indebted rural household in 2013 was Rs 1.03 lakh – almost equal to the price of a Royal Enfield Bullet 350 (Rs 1.09 lakh), more than a high end version of the iPhone X (Rs 1.02 lakh) and a Panasonic 55-inch flat screen TV (0.99 lakh). This is an indication of the gulf in urban and rural areas, where 833 million or 68.8 percent of Indians live, most of them poor.
Institutional agencies, such as commercial banks, regional rural banks, and insurance companies, held 56 percent of rural debt in 2013, while non-institutional agencies – which include money lenders, family or friends – held the remaining 44 percent.
Commercial banks, including regional rural banks, held 25.1 percent of rural debt and cooperative societies and cooperative banks 24.8 percent.
Karnataka is one of four major states (others are Chhattisgarh, Madhya Pradesh and Rajasthan) that will go to the polls in 2018; 70 percent of farmer suicides in Karnataka in 2015 were due to indebtedness.
Indebtedness is also higher among farmers with marginal land holdings; in poorer states, such as Uttar Pradesh, Bihar, West Bengal and Odisha, more than 75 percent farmers with marginal land holdings (up to 1 hectare/ 2.5 acres) are in debt.
More rural households rely on informal credit–from moneylenders, family and friends–than ever before, even as banks and other formal agencies struggled with unpaid loans.
In 2013, 28.6 percent, of farmers relied on professional moneylenders – the premier sources for rural loans – increasing from 19.6 percent in 2002, while non-performing assets (NPAs) of banks and other formal institutions lending to farmers rose 20 percent over a year to 2017.
Borrowing from formal sources implies paperwork, inflexible conditions and collateral, while informal sources are more flexible and often do not ask for collateral, even if money is lent at higher rates of interest: 38 percent of loans borrowed from informal sources had rates of interest higher than 30 percent. Informal sources don’t insist on punctual repayments, as banks do.
NPAs of agriculture and allied activities increased by 20 percent – from Rs 51,964 crore in March 2016 to Rs 62,307 crore in March 2017. However, a clear correlation of debt waivers and NPAs of banks cannot be made, said a 2017 RBI paper. While NPAs from agriculture did rise in 2009, a year after the 2008 agriculture waiver scheme was implemented, between 2011-15 they stagnated between 4-5 percent.
Behind rising NPAs is a story of growing crop failures – increasingly linked to climate change–and falling rural incomes.
One reason for rising farmer debt is that farm incomes that have not risen in tandem with good harvests.
Despite a good harvest in 2016, IndiaSpend reported in June 2017, 70 percent (62.6 million) of India’s agricultural households pay more than what they earn on average each month, mainly on private healthcare services.
High levels of debt and crop failures are other reasons that contribute to farmer suicides, Mint reported in May 2017.
Crop failures are associated with rising temperatures due to global warming. Crops are sensitive to climatic fluctuations such as unpredictable rains, drought and heat waves. Low harvests drive up food prices, shrink agricultural jobs and shrink household savings.
While high temperatures and low rainfall contributed to suicides during the growing season, the same conditions had no effect on suicides during the off-season, IndiaSpend reported in August 2017, indicating that agricultural production was a direct cause.
The study was later challenged.
“Climate change has just begun to unfold, and the warming experienced since 1980 is far less than what is projected to occur in the coming decades,” said Carleton. “Therefore, the number of deaths attributable to warming is likely to rise in the future.”
This is the first of a two-part series.
(Nair is an intern with IndiaSpend, This article was first appeared on IndiaSpend and has been republished with permission.)
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