Journal of Community Mobilization and Sustainable Development

  • Year: 2025
  • Volume: 20
  • Issue: 2

Drivers and pattern of indebtedness among agricultural households in India: Insights from a largescale survey

  • Author:
  • S. Pavithra1, Alka Singh2,*, R.R. Burman3, Harbir Singh2, P. Venkatesh2, G.K. Jha4
  • Total Page Count: 10
  • Published Online: Sep 10, 2025
  • Page Number: 471 to 480

1ICAR-National Institute of Agricultural Economics and Policy Research (NIAP), New Delhi-110012

2ICAR-Indian Agricultural Research Institute (IARI), New Delhi-110012

3Indian Council of Agricultural Research (ICAR), Krishi Anusandhan Bhavan-I, New Delhi-110012

4ICAR-Indian Agricultural Statistical Research Institute (IASRI), New Dehi-110012

Abstract

Agricultural credit has an important role in meeting the financial needs of households for farm investment, consumption smoothing and risk mitigation. This study employs the unit level data from a large-scale survey of the NSS 77th round for exploring the determinants and patten of indebtedness among the agricultural households in India. It was found that 50 percent of the agricultural households in India were indebted. Rural financial inclusion programs seem to have been successful in extending the households’ access to institutional banking facilities in terms of access to a bank account. Institutional agencies were a major source of credit for the agricultural households especially, for meeting their farm investment needs. Non-farm financial needs such as medical expenditure, expenditure on housing, education and social ceremonies were also one of the major reasons for which the agricultural households borrowed funds, thus, leading to indebtedness. However, informal credit sources, like professional money lenders, friends and relatives played an important role in addressing these needs. Socially disadvantaged groups, households that are resource poor, those with an incidence of casual labour, experience of crop loss, and households having larger family size were more likely to be indebted. Social safety nets and risk reduction programs appeared to work in tandem with financial inclusion programs in reducing the extent of indebtedness and mitigating financial risks. The study recommends strengthening the outreach of KCC and extending institutional finance programmes for meeting consumption credit needs of the agricultural households.

Keywords

Indebtedness, Agricultural credit, Loan outstanding, Institutional credit source, PM-Jan Dhan Yojana (PMJDY), Kisan Credit Card (KCC), Financial inclusion, Crop Insurance (PMFBY)