In 80% farmer-suicides due to debt, loans from banks, not moneylenders
In
80% farmer-suicides due to debt, loans from banks, not moneylenders
It’s for the first
time that the NCRB has categorized farmers’ suicides due to debt or bankruptcy
based on the source of loans.
LOCAL MONEYLENDERS are usually portrayed
as the villains in India’s farmer-suicides narrative, but government data shows
that 80 per cent of farmers killed themselves in 2015 because of bankruptcy or
debts after taking loans from banks and registered microfinance institutions.
According to National Crime Records Bureau’s latest
farmer-suicides data, of the over 3,000 farmers who committed suicides across
the country in 2015 due to debt and bankruptcy, 2,474 had taken loans from
banks or microfinance institutions.
It’s for the first time that the NCRB
has categorised farmers’ suicides due to debt or bankruptcy based on the source
of loans.
The figures show that
only 10 per cent farmers had committed suicide due to debts caused by loans
taken from both banks and moneylenders — the share of loans from moneylenders
under this section was 9.8 per cent.
Among the states, the data showed,
Maharashtra (3,030), Telangana (1,358), Karnataka (1,197), Chhattisgarh (854)
and Madhya Pradesh (516) led the table. Karnataka saw a more than three-fold
rise in farmer suicides in 2015, as compared to 2014 when around 300 farmers
ended their lives.
“The latest data is interesting because all of us thought that
moneylenders were the culprits of the piece.
Even today, more than half the people take loans from
moneylenders, because moneylenders were more flexible compared to banks
and microfinance institutions. “The organised sector is less flexible because
rules don’t permit them flexibility. The microfinance sector is worse. They put
pressure by telling others in self-help groups that their share would be cut if
one person does not pay loans in time. This creates social pressure, as well.
Many also send goons to the neighborhood to scare borrowers.
According to the NCRB data, “bankruptcy
and indebtedness” witnessed the sharpest spike in 2015, registering an almost
three-fold increase (3,097) as compared to 2014 (1,163).
Similarly, farm-related issues, too, have seen a sharp spike of
over 61 per cent. While 969 suicides were recorded due to crop-failure and
other farm-related issues in 2014, 2015 saw 1,562 suicides in this category.
Among states, Maharashtra (1,293) reported the maximum number of
suicides due to “indebtedness”, followed by Karnataka (946) and Telangana
(632). With 131 deaths, Telangana reported the highest number of suicides by
farmers who took loans from moneylenders, with 131 deaths, followed by
Karnataka (113).
Similarly, farm-related issues such as crop failure forced 769
farmers to end their lives in Maharashtra, followed by 363 in Telangana, 153 in
Andhra Pradesh and 122 in Karnataka. Family problems (933) and illness (842)
were other top reasons for suicides among farmers in 2015, according to NCRB
data.
Courtesy : IE
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