Agricultural Investment and Economic Growth

Authors

  • Dr. Swarooprani K  Assistant Professor, Siddhartha Arts and Commerce Degree College Bidar, Karnataka, India

DOI:

https://doi.org//10.32628/IJSRST229659

Keywords:

Financial Reserve, Agro-Based Industries, Finance Credit

Abstract

A financial reserve is one of the key rudiments to this transition. Financial supply is a very significant, if not the most significant, factor in economic growth. Farmers need financial source to buy better agricultural inputs and farm equipment so that they can augment their output and income height and break the cycle of scarcity. Farmer’s asset in these technologies cannot be real lacking having in place organization and systems that are able of sufficiently providing rural financial military to farmers. So, the attempt to develop agriculture could experience in the deficiency of a strong monetary base that aims at increasing access to credit for small farmers. Unhappily, the state of rural monetary markets in rising countries is characterized by inadequate accessibility of financing for both agricultural and non-agricultural activities. Very little of the rural populations have admission to financial military because saleable banks consider lending to small farmers as a risky commerce and because providing financial military to rural citizens is careful to be more costly and tricky. Lending to small farmers involves high contract costs. They lack conventional security and the executive skill and do not keep records. India is characterized by a cruel circle of poverty (low productivity, low profits, low savings and therefore low productivity). In order to break this cycle of scarcity and raise efficiency inoculation of capital could play a major role. Praise is the only instrument for small farmers to obtain the desired assets goods for manufacture and to break the cruel cycle of poverty and raise their efficiency and level of income. Ethiopia should forever give priority to the peasant cultivation in its nationwide development pains since growth cannot take place devoid of giving meticulous consideration to the conventional of the rural populace. In a country where agriculture account for a main amount of economic behavior and employs a great proportion of the population augmented availability of credit to the sector would lead to increased production and growth. Therefore, in order for cultivation to efficiently meet the challenge of being an engine of growth credit should be made obtainable and accessible to farmers in scrupulous.

References

  1. Durgadas Roy (2006), “Rural Banking and Agricultural Finance in India Promise and Reality”, Rajat Publications, New Delhi. ™
  2. Banerjee. P. K. (1970), “Indian Agricultural Economy”, Chaitanya Publication, New Delhi. 
  3. Choubey B.N (1983), “Agricultural Banking in India”, National Publishing House, New Delhi. 
  4. Umesh Prasad (2003), “Agricultural Credit and NABARD”, Deep and Deep Publications Pvt.
  5. Ltd., New Delhi. Rath, Nilakantha, “Agricultural Credit for Agriculture in India”, Journal of Indian School of Political Economy, 1(2), 1989: 239 – 67.

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Published

2022-12-30

Issue

Section

Research Articles

How to Cite

[1]
Dr. Swarooprani K, " Agricultural Investment and Economic Growth, International Journal of Scientific Research in Science and Technology(IJSRST), Online ISSN : 2395-602X, Print ISSN : 2395-6011, Volume 9, Issue 6, pp.472-475, November-December-2022. Available at doi : https://doi.org/10.32628/IJSRST229659