After the Punjab government announced debt waiver for farming sector, growers in several parts of the state have stopped repayment of bank loans in anticipation of relief.
"We have witnessed about 60 per cent drop in repayment of farm loans as accounts are turning irregular," Punjab State Level Bankers Committee (SLBC) Convener and Punjab National Bank General Manager (Punjab) P S Chauhan said today.
"It is happening as farmers are waiting for debt waiver implementation," he pointed out.
"In accounts which have become irregular, we are not making any enhancement in such loan accounts. For example, if a defaulting farmer wants enhancement of Rs 1 lakh in his loan account, we are not allowing this," he said.
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To speed up recoveries, banks are warning growers that they would not get interest subvention in crop loan if they fail to repay loans.
"There will be no interest subvention of 3 per cent available to farmers if he does not repay loan. Moreover he will also not be eligible for fresh lending," he said.
As part of debt waiver plan, the Punjab government had last month announced waiver of entire crop loans up to Rs 2 lakh for small and marginal farmers (up to 5 acres), and a flat Rs 2 lakh relief for all other marginal farmers, irrespective of their loan amount, which would benefit a total of 10.25 lakh farmers, including 8.75 lakh farmers up to 5 acres.
Chief Minister Amarinder Singh even today met Union Finance Minister Arun Jaitley in Delhi, seeking one-time settlement of the Rs 6,000 crore loans taken by the state's farmers from national and private banks.
Such a settlement will benefit 4.5 lakh of the state's beleaguered farmers, the chief minister told Jaitley at a meeting.
Amarinder sought the minister's intervention to convert the Rs 6,000 crore loan into term loan by giving requisite directions to the Reserve Bank of India (RBI).
These banks, said the chief minister, were giving unethical loans to farmers, pushing them into a vicious cycle of debt.
The Punjab government had pegged a sum of Rs 9,500 crore which would be required to fully implement debt waiver scheme.
It had proposed Rs 1,500 crore in the state budget for the debt as state government envisaged to settle farm loans in about four to five years.
At present, the total agricultural debt in Punjab is pegged at Rs 85,000 crore.