Sources of Funds in Agricultural Lending
Rural financial markets in developing countries
consist of various intermediaries: agricultural development banks,
commercial banks, rural unit banks, co-operatives, NGOs, informal
financial institutions and individual moneylenders. Regardless of
whether these actors are formal or informal, large-scale or only one-man
businesses, they have one feature in common: they can not operate
without financial inputs. Financial intermediation is their main
purpose, which refers to capturing funds to transform into loans. Both
sides of the financial intermediation process have their particular
rules. Just as financial institutions can fail due to a bad loan
portfolio, they can also fail due to a bad management of their sources
of funds. In particular, financial institutions involved in agricultural
lending are exposed to high risks due to the problem of mismatched
conditions of funds and loans. That is why liability management has
become an essential part of a financial institution's activities in the
last three decades. (In addition to the overall problem of managing
liabilities effectively, access to formerly relevant sources of funds
decreased in the last decade.)
However, there is still a necessity to create
awareness of this task in the area of agricultural finance. Each fund
available for agricultural lending is associated with some essential
features. These pose advantages and disadvantages from the financial
institution's point of view. It is not possible to access funds without
being influenced by their particular ingredients. Some features attached
to funds are negligible, some are positive but others can be highly
dangerous for financial institutions depending on the situation, the
type of institution using them and its special aims. Every financial
institution has to analyse the specific impacts of each fund on its
aims, viability and autonomy to determine the most appropriate mix of
funding sources. Resource mobilization for agricultural lending faces a
lot of challenges due to the specific nature of agricultural credit
demand. Lenders have less turnover of their loan portfolio because of
the particular term-structure (seasonal and long-term) of credit for
agriculture. This has a direct impact on the composition of funds needed
to meet the specific requirements of agricultural producers.
It is therefore essential for financial institutions
to develop appropriate strategies in order to find a sound and suitable
composition of funds for agricultural lending. Corresponding proposals
and recommendations are listed in the document indicated below. They are
consistent with the overall aim of providing the necessary resources for
agricultural investments of farmer households, especially small-scale
farmers in developing countries and focus mainly on formal and
semi-formal financial institutions. Only these actors are faced with a
big variety of funds for on-lending.
To read more about this issue, please consult the
document "Sources of funds for Agricultural Lending" here.
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