Corpus to help underprivileged students access cheap educational loans. |
The government may increase the education cess in the Budget as part of a plan to create a corpus to provide cheap loans to students from low-income families. |
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This was discussed at a meeting chaired by the Prime Minister's Principal Secretary, TKA Nair, on January 12 with the Indian Bank Association, industry bodies and human resource development ministry officials. |
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The meeting examined the possibility of the government providing banks with subsidies to reduce interest rates on educational loans for students from low-income families by 4 percentage points. Current rates on such loans range from 10 per cent to 15 per cent. |
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The move is broadly seen as a means to strengthen affirmative action for deserving students from low income families. Education, along with agriculture, is a designated priority sector to which banks have to lend 40 per cent of their loan portfolios. |
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A final decision, however, was not taken at the meeting. The present rate of the cess, imposed in 2004-05, is 2 per cent. It is a surcharge on total payable tax, not on total income. It is imposed on income tax, corporation tax, excise, Customs duties and service tax. The education cess yields Rs 4,000-5,000 crore a year. |
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The discussions broadly focused on solving the two major problems of high interest rates and a low repayment period of around five years that have been identified as major deterrents for students. |
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Issues linked with determining eligibility for concessional credit, enlarging the moratorium and the repayment period were also discussed at the meeting. |
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