World Bank rural finance scheme to help Indian farmers
June 9th, 2009 - 11:09 am ICT by IANSBy Arun Kumar
Washington, June 9 (IANS) With a $20 million Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation contribution, the World Bank will establish an Agriculture Finance Support Facility to support the expansion of rural finance in the developing world including India.
In a time of tight credit, the Facility will support grants to bank and non-bank institutions for activities to increase access to financial services, such as savings, credit, payments and insurance, in rural areas in developing countries as profitable business lines, the bank announced Monday.
“In India, a country with relatively high rural banking outreach, 45 percent of smallholder farmers did not have a savings account, and 69 percent did not have a credit account with formal financial institutions,” it noted announcing the new venture in recognition of the financial crisis hitting the poorest the hardest.
“There is a great need among smallholder farmers, who make up the bulk of the world’s poor, for ways to save and manage their money,” said Carlos Cuevas, Deputy Director of Financial Services for the Poor for the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation.
“Having access to safe and reliable financial services such as savings, credit and insurance, allows poor farmers to safeguard cash, which they often receive only once a year during harvest. In this way, they can better provide for their families, prepare for emergencies, and build long term financial security.”
“We need to ensure sustainable access to financial services as a fundamental way to reduce poverty,” said Renate Kloeppinger-Todd, Rural Finance Adviser at the World Bank.
“The Facility will enable financial institutions to provide new opportunities for smallholder farmers to make productivity enhancing investments and to use new technology and services.”
Even before the financial crisis, most of the over one billion smallholder farmers worldwide and many of the rural entrepreneurs of the developing world had little to no access to financial services. Since the financial crisis, access to these needed services has become even more strained.
Financial cooperatives and cooperative banks, a major source for financial services in rural areas in developed countries, have not emerged as significant service providers in most developing countries, the Bank said.
The World Bank provides ongoing support to many countries to improve the enabling environment for financial sector development. It also makes direct investments in rural finance. In fiscal year 2008, the World Bank committed $613 million for 28 rural finance projects.
(Arun Kumar can be contacted at arun.kumar@ians.in)
- Melinda Gates pledges $500 mn more for world's poor - Nov 18, 2010
- $170 mn World Bank loans for Rajasthan, Uttarakhand - Jan 14, 2011
- World Bank approves funding for India's agricultural project - Mar 28, 2012
- Small borrowers rely on moneylenders: Study - Oct 11, 2011
- Karnataka for exempting cooperatives from direct tax code - Mar 06, 2012
- Resilient economy reflected country's economic management: Mukherjee - Jan 10, 2011
- Generate required level of awareness about insurance benefits to poor: Mukherjee - Sep 01, 2010
- Pranab asks banks expand to rural areas, expedite credit flow - Jul 06, 2010
- Pranab Mukherjee asks state governments and banks to improve credit flow - Jun 28, 2010
- Reserve Bank of India extends financial services to rural areas - Sep 14, 2010
- Small farmers hold big key to solving global warming - Dec 07, 2010
- Pranab Mukherjee promises more rural banks - Feb 11, 2011
- Credit Information Bureau to target insurance, telecom firms - Aug 03, 2011
- FM asks banks to achieve the target of providing banking, financial services to all by 2011 - Sep 07, 2010
- $250 mn World Bank credit for West Bengal farmers - Oct 04, 2011
Tags: agriculture finance, arun kumar, bank institutions, bill melinda gates, bill melinda gates foundation, business lines, carlos cuevas, credit payments, developing world, finance scheme, finance support, financial institutions, financial security, indian farmers, melinda gates foundation, one billion, poor farmers, profitable business, savings account, tight credit