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By:

Parashram Patil

14 January 2026 at 3:19:45 pm

Credit Scores for Farmer Health

India’s rural co-operatives are undergoing the biggest technological overhaul in their history. More than 61,000 Primary Agricultural Credit Societies (PACS) have now been integrated into a unified digital ERP platform under the Ministry of Co-operation, transforming once paper-bound village societies into data-driven financial hubs. PACS are no longer mere credit counters. Increasingly, they distribute fertilizers, run Jan Aushadhi centres, lease farm machinery and serve as the operating...

Credit Scores for Farmer Health

India’s rural co-operatives are undergoing the biggest technological overhaul in their history. More than 61,000 Primary Agricultural Credit Societies (PACS) have now been integrated into a unified digital ERP platform under the Ministry of Co-operation, transforming once paper-bound village societies into data-driven financial hubs. PACS are no longer mere credit counters. Increasingly, they distribute fertilizers, run Jan Aushadhi centres, lease farm machinery and serve as the operating system of the rural economy. Yet beneath this modernisation lies an old and largely ignored vulnerability. India’s agricultural-credit architecture has become adept at managing risks to crops, but not risks to cultivators themselves. Droughts, pest attacks and unseasonal rainfall are insured against. The body of the farmer, however, remains outside the balance sheet. That omission is becoming expensive. Measuring Farmer Health A growing body of thinking, described as the ‘Farmers Health Capital’ framework, argues that agricultural productivity cannot be measured purely through land, machinery and labour. Classical economics models farm output as a combination of technology, capital and labour: Y=f(A,K,L) But this assumes labour is mechanically constant. In reality, labour efficiency depends heavily on the physical condition of the worker. The revised framework therefore introduces a “health efficiency multiplier” modifying productivity into: Y=f(A,K,L\times H) Here, H represents the health stock of the cultivator. Under punishing heatwaves, pesticide exposure or chronic musculoskeletal strain, this stock depreciates rapidly. A farmer may physically work eight hours in a field during a 42°C heatwave, but the effective economic value of that labour may collapse by half. This sounds abstract until one examines the financial consequences. Across rural India, many short-term loan defaults are triggered not by crop failures but by medical emergencies. When illness strikes a farming household, repayment schedules are often ‘hijacked,’ meaning money meant for servicing crop loans is redirected towards hospital bills and urgent treatment. The result is a silent leak in the co-operative credit system. Traditional crop insurance protects against environmental shocks. It does little when the harvest succeeds but the cultivator collapses before reaching the mandi. A family that should have remained solvent suddenly becomes a non-performing asset (NPA) risk for its local PACS. As digitised co-operatives expand their lending operations, this human vulnerability threatens to scale with them. That is why some policy thinkers including myself are proposing a new mechanism: health-linked credit scorecards embedded directly into the PACS digital infrastructure. The idea is when farmers visit their local PACS to purchase inputs or manage seasonal credit, they could undergo rapid occupational-health assessments through digital interfaces integrated into the ERP system. The software would then generate a “Health Capital Rating” based on factors such as heat exposure, ergonomic strain and safe pesticide practices. Farmers who adopt protective behaviours would earn “Health Capital Credits.” These could translate into tangible banking incentives, including lower interest rates on crop loans. Low Cost The attraction of the proposal lies partly in its low cost. Because the national PACS digital network already exists, advocates argue that the model could initially be tested as a software-layer upgrade rather than a major new welfare scheme. A pilot across high-stress agricultural belts such as Vidarbha could examine whether health-linked monitoring actually reduces default rates over a single crop cycle. Climate change magnifies this distortion. Heatwaves do not merely reduce crop yields; they directly erode labour productivity. Under severe thermal stress, the human body diverts energy toward cooling itself, accelerating fatigue and impairing cognitive function. For smallholders already operating on thin margins, the biological cost of farming is becoming economically destabilising. India’s co-operative ecosystem is uniquely positioned to operationalise such an approach. Large federations like IFFCO already possess deep distribution networks across rural India. Dairy unions modelled on Amul and sugar co-operatives in western India have a direct financial interest in maintaining the physical resilience of their producer base. A healthier cultivator is not merely a social good; he is a more reliable borrower, supplier and economic actor. Critics may worry about creating a two-tier rural credit structure where physically vulnerable farmers are penalised rather than protected. Others will question whether the state should integrate biometric health data into financial decision-making at all. Yet the central insight behind the proposal remains powerful. India’s rural-credit debate has long focused on waivers, subsidies and insurance. Far less attention has been paid to the biological fragility underlying agricultural finance itself. The computerisation of PACS offers an opportunity to rethink that equation. (The writer is a member of Maharashtra Agriculture Price Commission. Views personal.)

'Shameful', 'provocative': Yunus's comments draw sharp reactions from political leaders

  • PTI
  • Apr 1, 2025
  • 2 min read

New Delhi: The recent comments made by Bangladesh Chief Adviser Muhammad Yunus on India's northeastern states drew sharp reactions from political leaders across party lines on Tuesday, dubbing his remarks as "shameful" and "provocative".


Congress leader Pawan Khera on Monday shared a video clip on X of Yunus, in which he claimed that Bangladesh was the sole "guardian of the ocean (Bay of Bengal)," as India's northeastern states were "landlocked". He said this opens up a "huge possibility" and urged China to extend its economic influence to his country.


These comments were purportedly made during his four-day visit to China.


Shiv Sena (UBT) MP Priyanka Chaturvedi on Tuesday said this was a "very serious issue" and it concerns the "safety and security" of the nation.


"It's a very shameful comment...he is mentioning regions of our country to move the China agenda. I feel India should take a tough stand on it. It endangers the safety and security of the nation," she told PTI Videos outside the Parliament building.


Assam Chief Minister Himanta Biswa Sarma described Yunus's remarks as "offensive and strongly condemnable" and called for prioritisation of exploring alternative routes connecting the Northeast to the rest of India, bypassing the 'Chicken's Neck'.


"The statement made by Md Younus of Bangladesh, the so-called interim Government referring to the seven sister states of Northeast India as landlocked and positioning Bangladesh as their guardian of ocean access, is offensive and strongly condemnable," Sarma posted on X.


"Such provocative statements by Md Younus must not be taken lightly, as they reflect deeper strategic considerations and longstanding agendas," he added.


Khera, who is party's head of media and publicity department, alleged that "Bangladesh is inviting China to encircle India."


"This attitude of the Bangladesh government is very dangerous for the security of our North East region. The government is not taking care of Manipur and China has already settled villages in Arunachal," Khera wrote in Hindi on X.


Last week, Bangladesh's chief adviser met Chinese President Xi Jinping and sought stepped-up investments from China to revive Bangladesh's flagging economy, hit by a political and economic crisis.


"It's very important that we see China as our good friend," Yunus said, projecting Beijing as a balancing factor against New Delhi.


He expects bilateral relations to enter a new stage, Yunus told the Chinese state-run Xinhua news agency in an interview during the visit.


A former ambassador of India described the comments as "most unfortunate," though he said that New Delhi should not panic over Yunus' statements.


"It doesn't change the reality of what India is today and what it is capable of (India is) fully capable of protecting its security concerns," Venu Rajamony, who served as India's ambassador to the Netherlands from 2017 to 2020, told PTI.


When asked about its impact on India-Bangladesh ties, Rajamony said, "On bilateral ties trajectory, there is no indication of any major shift in Bangladesh's policy towards India."

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