India News | Govt Extends Crop Loan Repayment Date Till Aug 31; Prompt Re-payers to Benefit
Get latest articles and stories on India at LatestLY. The government on Monday decided that farmers who availed short-term crop loans at a concessional rate of 4 per cent per annum and missed their repayment after March 1, can now repay by August 31 without paying any penalty.
New Delhi, Jun 1 (PTI) The government on Monday decided that farmers who availed short-term crop loans at a concessional rate of 4 per cent per annum and missed their repayment after March 1, can now repay by August 31 without paying any penalty.
The decision, taken by the Cabinet headed by Prime Minister Narendra Modi, to extend the loan repayment date will help farmers in avoiding travelling to banks for renewal or repayment of loans during the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic period, an official statement said.
This is the second time the repayment date has been extended. Earlier it was extended till May 31.
Normally, farm loans attract an interest rate of 9 per cent. But the government is providing a 2 per cent interest subsidy to ensure farmers get short-term farm loans of up to Rs 3 lakh at an effective rate of 7 per cent per annum.
However, the interest rate gets even lower at 4 per cent to those farmers who repay their loans timely. The Cabinet decision taken will benefit these categories of farmers.
"Farmers who will repay their loan before August 31 will be levied a concessional interest rate of 4 per cent, which is for prompt repayers," Agriculture Minister Narendra Singh Tomar told media after the meeting.
Asked whether the extension of repayment period till August 31 means that COVID-19 crisis will continue till that time, Tomar said, "No one in the government is an astrologer".
"The government makes an effort to lessen the inconvenience caused to people. Earlier, we thought that the movement of people would become smooth by May 31. But we have received the feedback that there is still a problem in movement. So, we extended the deadline for loan repayment. So, there is no point linking with other things," he said.
In the wake of the lockdown due to COVID-19 pandemic, there have been restrictions imposed on movement of people. Many farmers are not able to travel to bank branches for payment of their short term crop loan dues, the government said in a statement.
Moreover, due to restrictions on movement of people, difficulty in timely sale, receipt of payment of their produce and the necessity of adhering to social distancing norms, farmers are finding it difficult to arrange the amount to be deposited for renewal and are unable to visit the banks to deposit and draw fresh loans, it said.
Tomar also said the government had borne crop loan interest subsidy of Rs 18,000 crore last fiscal and this might increase in the current year.
With regard to Kisan Credit Card (KCC), the minister said the government has provided KCC to 6.65 crore farmers at present and aims to reach out additional 2.5 to 3 crore farmers.
The farm credit target for the current fiscal has been set at Rs 15 lakh crore.
(This is an unedited and auto-generated story from Syndicated News feed, LatestLY Staff may not have modified or edited the content body)