Author : Vivek kaul
Several state governments have waived off farm loans over the past few months. The second volume of the Economic Survey released late last week analyses the economic impact of this phenomenon. Here are the points that the Survey makes:
a)
What farm loan waivers basically do is that they transfer debt from the
level of individuals and households to that of the state governments.
When a state government waives off farm loans it needs to compensate the
banks which had originally given the loans to farmers. Hence, it ends
up with the debt of the farmers.
The
Economic Survey expects the farm loan waive offs to cost anywhere
between Rs 2.2 lakh crore and Rs 2.7 lakh crore. As the Survey points
out: "It is assumed that waivers will apply at the loan rather than
household level, since it will be administratively difficult to
aggregate loans across households. It is also assumed that other states
will follow the UP model. On this basis, an upper
bound of loan waivers at the All-India level would be between Rs. 2.2
and Rs. 2.7 lakh crore."
This
is simply because the demand for waive offs will come from other states
as well and the state governments are expected to comply. The Survey
points out that "the widespread demand for loan waivers could simply be a demonstration effect from the UP loan waiver.
b)
The Survey believes that waivers will reduce demand in the country to
that extent of Rs 1.1 lakh crore or 0.7 per cent of the GDP. This will
be a huge deflationary shock to the economy.
c)
The farmers will benefit from the waive off and increase their
consumption, the Survey says. While, this sounds true in theory, the
actual evidence from 2008-2009 when the central government had announced
farm loan waivers, is different. Research found that actual consumption
did not go up after the farm loan waivers.
d)
The state governments will have to borrow more in order to compensate
the banks which have given loans to farmers. A part of the compensation
for the banks will also come from the governments having to cut their
expenditure in other areas. Since the governments will not be in a
position to cut their regular expenditure like salaries, repayment of
interest on the outstanding debt, etc., it will
have to cut the asset creating capital expenditure. As the Survey points
out: "a recent illustration is Uttar Pradesh which has slashed
capital expenditure by 13 per cent (excluding UDAY) to accommodate the
loan waiver."
This is a point that the latest monetary policy
statement of the Reserve Bank of India, also made: "Farm loan
waivers are likely to compel a cutback on capital expenditure, with
adverse implications for the already damped capex cycle."
e)
Also, the state governments are yet to clearly define who will benefit
from the waivers and who won't. This essentially leads to two points.
One, it is difficult to come up with the overall cost of the waivers.
Two, in order to implement the waivers, the state governments need to
come up with clear definitions. This basically means that any
implementation will take time and the benefits
won't be immediate.As the Survey points out: "Three states have been
specific about the waiver schemes: UP has announced waivers of up to Rs.
1 lakh for all small and marginal farmers; Punjab's limit is Rs. 2 lakh
for small farmers without defining who these are; and Karnataka has
limited the waiver amount to Rs. 50,000 (Maharashtra's waiver terms are
still unclear). The waiver announcements also do not make clear whether
the amounts will apply to households or loans: typically, a household
will have more than one loan."
f)
There are other negative effects of the waiver as well. Credit
discipline (or the basic idea that loans need to be repaid) goes for a
toss. Further, it benefits only those who borrowed from formal sources.
Also, a "World Bank study found that lending increased following the
2008-09 waiver even if not in the districts with greater exposure to the
waiver."
Given
these negatives on the economic front, it is important to ask why are
farm loan waivers being made. The reason for this is fairly
straightforward: the gains of farm loan waivers are more visible than losses.
When
farm loan waivers are announced in one state, a large section of the
farmers in that state who had taken on loans from the banking system,
benefit from it. This is a clear visible effect, which the governments
like to cater to. The negative effects are not so visible.Now take the
case of a state government which needs to borrow more in order to pay
off the banks which had made the farm loans
in the first place. It will end up paying a higher rate of interest on
its increased borrowings because at the end of the day the financial
system has only so much money that can be borrowed. And any increased
demand leads to higher interest rates.
As the Economic Survey points out: "Demands
for farm loan waivers have emerged at a time when state finances have
been deteriorating. The UDAY scheme has led to rising market borrowings
by the states, expected soon to overtake central government borrowings.
As a result, spreads on state government bonds relative to g-secs have
steadily risen by about 60 basis points."
The
UDAY scheme was basically debt restructuring scheme which moved debt
from the balance sheets of power companies run by state governments to
that of the balance sheets of the state governments. Due to this the
interest paid by state governments on their debt is around 60 basis
points higher than that paid by the central government on its debt. The
extra borrowing because of the farm loan waivers
will only push up this rate of interest for state governments, making
things even more difficult for them.
At
the same time, states will also have to cut down on their capital
expenditure in order to finance a part of their waiver. The deflationary
shock because of this will be spread across the length and breadth of
the country. Hence, each individual will have to take on only a small
part of the pain. And he or she may not even feel it in the first place.
These
are negative impacts of farm loan waivers, which are not as clearly
visible in comparison to the direct benefit to farmers whose loans have
been waived off.
Or
take the case of the government of Maharashtra charging a drought cess
of Rs 9 every time one litre of petrol is bought in the state. Why is
this cess even there during a time when there is really no drought in
the state? It is there so that the government can meet its expenditure
on account of farm loan waivers and other expenses.
The
question is how many people even know that such a cess exists, in the
first place. The point is that there no free lunches when it comes to
economics. It's just that their cost is not visible many times and
politicians simply make use of that.
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