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Modi seen forgiving farm loans to win rural voters

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Mayank Bhardwaj AND Rajendra Jadhav - 
Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s government is likely to announce loan waivers worth billions of dollars to woo millions of farmers ahead of a general election, government sources said, after his ruling party suffered a rural drubbing in state polls.
Modi’s Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) lost power to the opposition Congress in three big heartland states, where agriculture is still a mainstay, according to vote counting on Tuesday.
To claw back support among India’s 263 million farmers and their many millions of dependents, Modi’s administration would soon start working out the details of a plan allocating money to write off farm loans, government sources said.
With a national election due by May 2019, Modi and the BJP have run out of time to announce other easy, popular measures such as raising the support, or guaranteed, prices for staples such as rice and wheat, farm analysts said.
“Elections are round the corner and you know that you’ve failed to fix the problems being faced by these farmers, so you will soon go to town promising agri-loan waivers,” said Ashok Gulati, a farm economist who advised India’s last government on crop prices.
The plan could see as much as Rs 4 trillion ($56.5 billion) in loans written off, the government sources and analysts said.
Farm loan waivers would be the biggest help the government has ever provided to farmers, said the officials, who did not wish to be identified in line with government policy.
The previous Congress party-led coalition government announced farm loan waivers worth nearly Rs 720 billion in 2008, helping it return to power with a bigger mandate in 2009.
Economists caution that farm loans waivers would widen a fiscal deficit the government has aimed to cap at 3.3 per cent of its gross domestic product (GDP), or Rs 6.24 trillion.
Even without the farm loan waiver, some credit rating agencies have estimated the country’s fiscal deficit at Rs 6.67 trillion — or 3.5 per cent of GDP, on muted tax collections. The loan waiver also risks deepening the malaise at public sector banks saddled with most of India’s $150 billion in stressed loans. If the government finds very limited fiscal space, it could go for loan waivers only in a few geographies that have suffered extreme weather conditions, sources and analysts said.
The results announced on Tuesday were from elections that took place over the past few weeks in Rajasthan, Chhattisgarh and Madhya Pradesh, three large states in the Hindi-speaking northern belt that is the BJP’s traditional stronghold.
The BJP lost power in Madhya Pradesh after holding power
there for 15 years. — Reuters



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