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Agriculture Rural Banking and Micro Finance in India

edited by Rais Ahmad, New Century Publications, 2012, xix, 236 p, table,, ISBN : 9788177083248, $45.00 (Includes free airmail shipping)

Agriculture Rural Banking and Micro Finance in India

Contents: Foreword. 1. Assessing financial services in rural areas/Amrik Singh Sudan, Rohini Gupta Suri and Anu Chadha. 2. India's foreign trade in agricultural products under WTO regime/Sakeer E. and Rais Ahmad. 3. Micro credit to rural poor: role of NGOs/Salini K. 4. Financial inclusion in India: initiatives to include the excluded/Anamika Kaushiva. 5. Micro finance for rickshaw pullers: a case study of Dibrugarh town/Kumud Chandra Goswami. 6. Agricultural subsidies and food security in India under WTO regime/Sakeer E. and Rais Ahmad. 7. Agricultural marketing reforms for vertical co-ordination and integration/Anamika Kaushiva. 8. Marketing of mutual funds in rural areas/Ranjit Singh and Anurag Singh. 9. Agriculture finance in India/A.N. Tamragundi and S.G. Hundekar. 10. Agriculture and rural banking/Ashish K. Makwana. 11. Financial inclusion of rural poor in India/P. Adi Lakshmi, Rajesh C. Jampala and Srinivasa Rao Dokku. 12. Regional rural Banks (RRBs) in India/P. Adi Lakshmi, Rajesh C. Jampala and Srinivasa Rao Dokku. Index.

Agricultural sector occupies a key position in the Indian economy. It provides employment to about 65 percent of the working population of India. It is but natural that the problems of farmers are addressed with a sense of urgency. Agriculture being a State subject, the bulk of public investment in agriculture takes place at the level of States and the Central Government supports the States as a catalyst.

Being the backbone of the Indian economy, agriculture has all along been treated as a priority sector for the allocation of institutional credit. The low growth rate of agriculture in the past few years has further strengthened the channels of credit flow to this sector.

Micro credit has emerged as a visible credit channel to the poor as their access to conventional credit channels is constrained by the requirement of collateral and high transaction cost. Micro finance is routed through self-help groups (SHGs). Over the years, SHG Bank Linkage Programme which includes commercial banks, regional rural banks and co-operative banks  has emerged as the major micro finance programme in the country.

This volume contains 12 well-researched papers, authored by experts in the field of agricultural finance, which provide an in-depth analysis of current state of agricultural/rural finance in India, emergence of micro finance, financial inclusion efforts and related matters. (jacket)

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