Farm loan write-offs win
votes in India, but may hurt economy
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[April 19, 2017]
By Rajendra Jadhav and Mayank Bhardwaj
MUMBAI/NEW
DELHI (Reuters) - India risks straining public finances and undermining
already ailing state banks, economists said, after a $5.6 billion loan
write-off for farmers in Uttar Pradesh and moves to do something similar
in at least four other states.
One of the first acts of the new government in India's most populous
state following last month's election triumph of Prime Minister Narendra
Modi's Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) was to keep a promise to provide
debt relief to 21.5 million farmers.
Taking their cue from Uttar Pradesh, more state governments could waive
loans to farmers, senior officials there said, to fulfill election
pledges or woo rural voters before further polls in the run-up to a
general election in 2019 when Modi is expected to run for a second term.
"This will spread like a contagious disease to most parts of the country
and you will very soon see at least 3-4 states announcing similar farm
loan waivers," said Ashok Gulati, a farm economist who advised India's
last government.
Economists caution that the move could encourage indebted farmers not to
repay loans, deepening malaise at public sector banks already saddled
with most of India's $150 billion in stressed loans.
Uttar Pradesh will cover the cost of the waivers by issuing bonds. This
would in turn constrain India's sovereign credit because such bonds are
backstopped by the federal government, the economists said.
India's total public sector debt, as a share of gross domestic product,
stands at around 66 percent - high compared to other emerging economies.
Economists at Merrill Lynch estimate that states will end up writing off
debts equivalent to 2 percent of GDP - the bulk of all outstanding loans
to farmers.
LEVERAGE LEVELS
Ratings agencies would like to see India's debt-to-GDP ratio fall below
60 percent over the next three years to justify an upgrade in its
sovereign rating. Yet debt waivers would, even if staggered, force up
borrowing, analysts said.
"The loan waivers would likely worsen the fiscal deficits and leverage
levels of the state governments, unless other resources are mobilized or
expenditure is controlled," said Aditi Nayar of ICRA, an affiliate of
Moody's Investors Service.
"There is a significant risk that productive capital spending may end up
being reduced to fund a portion of the loan waivers."
A government-appointed panel has suggested capping the states' debt at
20 percent of India's GDP, while Reserve Bank of India Governor Urjit
Patel has said the Uttar Pradesh loan waiver "undermines honest credit
culture".
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A farmer from the
southern state of Tamil Nadu poses as he bites a rat during a
protest demanding a drought-relief package from the federal
government, in New Delhi, India, March 27, 2017. REUTERS/Cathal
McNaughton/File Photo
WHO'S
NEXT?
The western state of Maharashtra and Punjab in the north are expected to
announce similar loan waivers soon, senior officials in both states told
Reuters.
In Maharashtra, ruled by the BJP, farmers are clamoring for a bailout after two
years of drought and falling commodity prices. In Punjab, known as India's grain
bowl, the opposition Congress party won last month's election partly on the
promise of a farm loan waiver.
In southern Tamil Nadu, reeling from dry weather, a court asked the state
government to write off loans to all farmers.
Farmers from Tamil Nadu recently protested in New Delhi, showing the skulls of
neighbors who had committed suicide to press their demand for drought relief and
loan write-offs.
WON'T
PAY
Some of India's 263 million farmers have decided not to repay their debts,
expecting loan waivers to mean they don't have to.
"I am not going to repay the loan because defaulters benefited from the previous
waiver and I didn't get any government help even as I repaid the loan on time,"
said Gorakh Patil, a farmer from Jalgaon in western India.
Patil was referring to an $11 billion national farm loan waiver in 2008 that
helped the Congress party-led coalition of the day win re-election the following
year. But non-performing assets jumped.
Gross non-performing loans in agriculture and its allied sectors surged to 588
billion rupees ($9.12 billion) at the end of the December quarter, from 97.4
billion rupees in the 2007/08 fiscal year, RBI data show.
"There's no benefit from such waivers," said a director at one state bank who
requested anonymity due to the sensitivity of the matter. "If you give any
benefit across the board, it definitely has an adverse effect on credit
discipline."
(Additional reporting by Rajesh Kumar Singh and Manoj Kumar in NEW DELHI and
Devidutta Tripathy in MUMBAI; Editing by Douglas Busvine and Mike Collett-White)
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