Co-operative Credit in Indian Agriculture

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Nowadays credit ‘serves as an elavator’. It no more “Supports the farmers as the hangman’s rope supports the hanged”. Credit is essential because agriculture takes months to obtain the yield. The present monography attempts to deal with the impact of co-operative credit on socio-economic and technological aspects of agriculture sector. The real success of co-operative credit depends on micro-level achievements of the PACS and PLDBs. The PACS are entitled to disburse the ST and MT loans while LT loans are being disbursed by LDBs. But most of the credit benefits are being harnessed by rich peasantry. Not only this but they have a control on PACS management, whereas co-operatives are meant for the backwards. Credits is responsible to transform the cropping and land use patterns with remarkable increase in the productivity and employment in-farm and off-farm activities. Both socio-economic change has been brought by credit, however, credit will not claim the change by it alone. The use of bio-technology and mechanical technology has gone high phenomenally, because of credit. Irrigation, investment in human capital and investment in industrial activities have been brought in by credit first and then sugar co-operatives in Maharashtra. If co-operatives are to be successful in bringing effective improvement in the well being of the rural populations as quickly as possible, then the co-operative movement must be armed with morality, dignity and equality. In most of the developing countries the co-operative movement must be armed with morality, dignity and equality. In most of the developing countries the co-operatives strategy has been accepted as the most appropriate instrument of achieving the goals of the economy. However, the system should be restructured and reframed for further consolidation of the confidence and economic gains obtained by the rural population.

ABOUT THE AUTHOR V.B. Jugale

V.B. Jugale is Professor and Head, Department of Economics and Dean of the Social Science Faculty, Shivaji University, Kolhapur. He is the Chief Editor of the Indian Development Review (An International Journal of Development Economics) published by the Serials Publication, New Delhi. He has a credit of authoring the reference books on; Theories of Agricultural Finance, Wages, Employment and Industrial Relations of Farm Sector Workers in Sugar industry, Sugarcane Pricing, Village Banking, Cooperative Credit in Indian Agriculture, Economic Analysis of Saline Lands in Sugarcane Belt, Decontrol and Delicensing of Sugar Industry, Water Management in Krishna River Basin, Water Resources in Man River Basin, Water Resources in Man River Basin, Horticulture Economy of Maharashtra etc. and such other 15 booklets and occasional papers. He has also a credit of publishing eighty research articles in the national international journals. He has presented more than hundred research papers in various seminars, conferences and symposiums organized by national and international organizations. He is the Founder President of the Centre for Social Studies and Research, Sangli.

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Bibliographic information

Title
Co-operative Credit in Indian Agriculture
Author
Edition
1st ed.
Publisher
ISBN
8170993970
Length
xiii+146p., Tables; Figures; Bibliography; Index; 23cm.
Subjects