Key Points

Maharashtra Chief Minister Devendra Fadnavis has strongly urged banks to provide agricultural loans without demanding CIBIL scores from farmers. He emphasized that such rigid credit requirements could potentially lead to farmer suicides and economic distress. The directive aims to support the agricultural sector and ensure financial inclusion for rural communities. Fadnavis highlighted the importance of banks cooperating with government schemes to strengthen the state's economic development.

Key Points: Fadnavis Tells Banks Stop CIBIL Score Demands from Farmers

  • Banks must provide loans without credit score checks
  • Maharashtra targets agricultural credit expansion
  • CM emphasizes farmer welfare and economic growth
4 min read

Don't seek CIBIL scores of farmers while granting loans: Maha CM Fadnavis tells banks

Maharashtra CM directs banks to provide agricultural loans without CIBIL score requirements to prevent farmer distress and support rural economy

"If agricultural loans are not provided to farmers, its consequences will be in the form of farmer suicides - Devendra Fadnavis"

Mumbai, May 19

Maharashtra Chief Minister Devendra Fadnavis on Monday directed the banks to provide agricultural loans to farmers without insisting on providing CIBIL score (credit information). CIBIL score is a 3-digit numeric summary of one's credit history, rating and report, and ranges from 300 to 900.

The closer one's score is to 900, the better his/her credit rating is. "If agricultural loans are not provided to farmers, its consequences will be in the form of farmer suicides along with the economy. Therefore, despite repeated warnings from farmers not to ask for CIBIL, banks are asking from the farmers. Please provide an immediate solution to this. Earlier, the government has also filed FIRs against such banks. You will have to take this issue seriously. The Reserve Bank has also given clarity regarding agricultural loans. If any bank branch is asking for CIBIL, the action will be taken against that branch," Fadnavis said at the 167th meeting of the State Level Bankers Committee held here.

The Chief Minister also asked the nationalised banks to make special efforts to increase the supply of agricultural loans and meet the target set for this year (2025-26).

On Monday, during the meeting, the state's credit plan for the financial year 2025-26 worth Rs 44,76,894 crore was approved.

Stating that Maharashtra is a leading state in the country, the Chief Minister said that farmers are the backbone of the state and agriculture is an important part of the state's economy. It is not right to ignore this sector. Therefore, nationalised banks should focus on increasing agricultural credit supply.

"The Meteorological Department has predicted good rains this year. Therefore, there is no drought situation, the crop will be good. In such a situation, banks should cooperate more with farmers. When there is good rain, the agricultural growth rate is good. Banks should take advantage of this and also help farmers. An investment policy is currently being implemented in the agricultural sector.

"The role of banks is important in it and they should participate in this investment. A target of investing at least Rs 5,000 crore per year has been set in the agricultural sector. Therefore, new opportunities will now be available for investment in this sector. Therefore, banks should provide maximum credit to farmers. It will only benefit banks," said the chief minister.

"The agricultural sector will now not be just auxiliary and rehabilitative, but will be seen as a business. Banks should play their role in this. A policy should be formulated to honour farmers and those who do good work in these schemes. Chief Minister Fadnavis also gave instructions to take the names of those who do not do a good job and express their displeasure with them in the next meeting so that they will be inspired to do even better work," he remarked.

CM Fadnavis said that Maharashtra has crossed the half-trillion economy milestone and is rapidly moving towards becoming a one-trillion economy. Banks play an important role in becoming a one-trillion economy.

"Maharashtra ranks first in foreign direct investment. Direct investment worth Rs 16 lakh crore has come to the state from Davos. Maharashtra is now the capital of startups. Banks should pay attention to this sector. It will generate employment on a large scale. The state is also number one in SSME and there are good opportunities for investment in it. Banks and the government need to work together to ensure that the benefits of central and state schemes for MSME reach the beneficiaries. This will help strengthen the economy of the state and the country," he said, adding that the banks should also focus on tourism and service sectors as a priority.

CM Fadnavis further said that there are a large number of FPOs in Maharashtra. They can play an important role in the development of the agricultural sector. More focus should be placed on Gadchiroli. A network of industries is being formed there. If banks decide their priorities with the government, there will be holistic development. It is also the responsibility of banks to implement the schemes of the central and state governments as only through this will financial inclusion be achieved, he added.

Deputy Chief Minister Eknath Shinde said that banks should take the issue of agricultural credit provision seriously.

Also, the 100 per cent target of credit provision should be met. Banks should cooperate with entrepreneurs, especially women entrepreneurs. Emphasis should be placed on increasing credit provision in the Greater Mumbai region as well with huge opportunities for development in this sector.

- IANS

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Reader Comments

Here are 6 diverse Indian perspective comments in HTML/Tailwind CSS format:
R
Rajesh K.
Good move by CM Fadnavis! Farmers already face so many challenges - weather, market prices, input costs. Banks making them run after CIBIL scores is just adding salt to injury. Agriculture is our annadata sector, needs special consideration 🙏
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Priya M.
While I support farmers, removing credit checks completely seems risky. Maybe a middle path? Like lower CIBIL requirements for small/marginal farmers but maintain some checks for larger loans. Otherwise NPAs will rise and hurt banking system in long run.
A
Amit S.
Finally some sense! Most farmers don't even understand what CIBIL is. My chacha in Nashik had to bribe agents to get his loan approved last season. Hope banks follow CM's orders properly this time. Jai Jawan, Jai Kisan! 🇮🇳
S
Sunita R.
Good initiative but implementation matters. Banks always find loopholes to deny loans to poor farmers. Government should create a separate agricultural credit bureau instead of using urban-focused CIBIL system which doesn't fit rural realities.
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Vikram J.
As someone from banking sector, I worry this may lead to more defaults. Better solution would be to educate farmers about financial literacy + improve CIBIL system to account for agricultural cycles. Blanket removal of credit checks isn't sustainable development.
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Neha P.
This is much needed! In villages, most transactions are cash-based. How can farmers maintain CIBIL scores? Government should also focus on crop insurance and fair MSP to ensure farmers can repay loans. One step at a time 👏

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