Key Points

Tamil Nadu farmers are facing significant challenges accessing the government's enhanced crop loan limit. Despite the official increase to Rs 2 lakh, cooperative societies across the state are restricting loan amounts below this threshold. Many first-time applicants are being completely denied loans while processing delays are affecting cultivation schedules. The inconsistent implementation is forcing farmers to turn to expensive private lenders, undermining the government's interest-free loan initiative.

Key Points: Tamil Nadu Farmers Denied Rs 2 Lakh Crop Loans by Cooperatives

  • Cooperative societies restricting loans below revised Rs 2 lakh collateral-free limit
  • First-time loan applicants being denied while previous borrowers favored
  • Farmers forced to approach private moneylenders at higher interest rates
  • Significant regional disparities in loan implementation across Tamil Nadu districts
  • Loan processing delays exceeding 10 days during critical cultivation period
  • Officials attributing variations to crop-specific input cost assessments
2 min read

TN farmers cry foul as cooperative societies restrict crop loans below Rs 2 lakh limit

TN farmers face loan restrictions as cooperative societies ignore Rs 2 lakh limit, forcing reliance on private moneylenders during peak cultivation season.

"Only those who had borrowed in the previous year are being considered for fresh loans - Farmer Complaints"

Chennai, Oct 14

Even after the Tamil Nadu government increased the ceiling for collateral-free crop loans from Rs 1.60 lakh to Rs 2 lakh with effect from January 1, 2025, several cooperative societies across the state are allegedly providing lower amounts to farmers.

Many cultivators have also complained that only those who had borrowed in the previous year are being considered for fresh loans this season, while first-time applicants are being denied.

The revised ceiling allows eligible farmers to avail interest-free crop loans up to Rs 2 lakh through Primary Agricultural Cooperative Banks (PACS), repayable within 12 months. However, farmers’ associations have raised concerns that a number of societies in districts such as Tiruppur and Coimbatore are issuing loans capped below the old limit, forcing many growers to depend on private moneylenders at higher interest rates.

While some cooperative banks are reportedly implementing the revised limit, the distribution remains inconsistent. In certain taluks, farmers have been able to access the full Rs 2 lakh loan amount without any restrictions, whereas in others, applications are being processed selectively.

Complaints have also emerged over the slow pace of loan approvals, with some societies taking over 10 days to process applications that should ideally be cleared within a week. Instead of handling applications individually, several banks are said to be bunching them together for collective processing, delaying disbursals during the peak cultivation season.

Officials in the cooperative department have attributed the variation in loan amounts to differences in crop costs. They said that societies assess the type of crops proposed for cultivation and determine the loan quantum accordingly.

For crops with lower input costs, the sanctioned amount may fall below Rs 2 lakh. Nonetheless, department sources have maintained that all eligible farmers are being covered under the revised scheme.

Farmer groups have urged the cooperative department to intervene and issue clear instructions to ensure that all eligible applicants receive the full revised limit of Rs 2 lakh, regardless of their past borrowing record. They also sought stricter monitoring to ensure that the government’s interest-free crop loan initiative reaches every farmer without bureaucratic hurdles or regional disparities.

- IANS

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Reader Comments

P
Priya S
Why punish first-time applicants? This policy defeats the purpose of encouraging new farmers. Agriculture sector needs fresh blood and such restrictions will only discourage youth from taking up farming 🌱
D
David E
While I understand the need for crop-specific assessment, the implementation seems arbitrary. There should be transparent criteria that farmers can understand and verify. 10-day processing time during peak season is unacceptable.
K
Karthik V
Same story every year! Announcements in Chennai but no implementation in villages. Cooperative societies have become political tools. Farmers deserve better treatment 🙏
S
Sarah B
The regional disparities mentioned here are concerning. If some taluks are getting full benefits while others aren't, it shows poor monitoring. Government should ensure uniform implementation across Tamil Nadu.
A
Arjun K
Respectfully, the cooperative department officials need to be more accountable. "Differences in crop costs" sounds like an excuse when farmers are clearly being denied their rightful loans. Proper training and monitoring required! 💪

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