Credit in agrarian India: narrative policy struggles over farmer surplus

IF 3.4 2区 社会学 Q1 GEOGRAPHY Geoforum Pub Date : 2024-08-02 DOI:10.1016/j.geoforum.2024.104081
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Abstract

Debt is fundamental to agrarian life across the world. In India, over half of agricultural households are indebted and borrow from myriad credit sources. Formal institutional credit (e.g., bank loans) has historically, and up to the present day, been proposed as a tool for rural development and to eliminate exploitative informal moneylenders. This is true in India, where despite decades of state policies to displace informal lending using formal credit, informal lending persists and increasing debt is an ever-present symptom of the agrarian crisis. Informal lending made up 30% of farmers’ credit sources in 2019; for farmers who owned less than 0.01 ha of land, this was 71.8%. In this paper we provide an historical examination of the numerous state responses to the proliferation of agrarian debt, surveying lending policy as a state development tool in India. We analyze how moneylending has been treated in different historical periods and the increasing participation of the state (from colonial to present times) in agrarian debt and use a Narrative Policy Analysis to synthesize the underlying “narratives” that characterize evolving policy forms. In the process, we reveal not only a consistent narrative assuming the displacement of informal credit with formal credit, one contradicted by the situation on the ground: an absolute increasing trend in borrowing, and a crucial propagation of the number and variety of credit sources. This we observe to be precisely a result of the largely fruitless state effort to formalize credit and to eliminate informal lending. This persistent discourse that posits formality as a solution to informality, we further conclude, is not only a cultural project of the colonial, post-colonial, and modernization state, but one essential for the circulation and accumulation of capital, enhancing its urgency. The failed effort to eliminate informal lending has resulted, furthermore, in a decline in farmer autonomy and the creation of a state-underwritten struggle − between multiple actors in the credit sector − over the redistribution of agrarian surplus.

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印度农业领域的信贷:农民盈余的叙事政策之争
债务是全世界农业生活的基础。在印度,一半以上的农户都负债累累,并从各种信贷渠道借款。正式的机构信贷(如银行贷款)在历史上一直被作为农村发展和消除剥削性非正规放债人的工具而提出,直至今日。印度的情况也是如此,尽管几十年来国家一直在推行利用正规信贷取代非正规借贷的政策,但非正规借贷依然存在,债务不断增加是土地危机始终存在的症状。2019 年,非正规贷款占农民信贷来源的 30%;对于拥有土地不足 0.01 公顷的农民而言,这一比例为 71.8%。在本文中,我们对各邦应对土地债务激增的众多措施进行了历史考察,调查了作为印度国家发展工具的借贷政策。我们分析了不同历史时期对放贷的处理方式,以及国家(从殖民时期到现在)对土地债务的日益参与,并使用叙事政策分析法综合了政策形式演变的基本 "叙事 "特征。在这一过程中,我们不仅揭示了假定正规信贷取代非正规信贷的连贯叙事,而且还揭示了与实际情况相矛盾的叙事:借贷呈绝对增长趋势,信贷来源的数量和种类大幅增加。据我们观察,这正是国家努力使信贷正规化并消除非正规借贷的结果。我们进一步得出结论,这种将正规化视为解决非正规借贷问题的顽固论调,不仅是殖民地、后殖民和现代化国家的文化项目,也是资本流通和积累所必需的,从而增强了其紧迫性。此外,消除非正规借贷的努力失败,导致农民自主权下降,并在信贷部门的多个参与者之间形成了一场由国家包办的关于土地剩余再分配的斗争。
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来源期刊
Geoforum
Geoforum GEOGRAPHY-
CiteScore
7.30
自引率
5.70%
发文量
201
期刊介绍: Geoforum is an international, inter-disciplinary journal, global in outlook, and integrative in approach. The broad focus of Geoforum is the organisation of economic, political, social and environmental systems through space and over time. Areas of study range from the analysis of the global political economy and environment, through national systems of regulation and governance, to urban and regional development, local economic and urban planning and resources management. The journal also includes a Critical Review section which features critical assessments of research in all the above areas.
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