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This Article is From Oct 20, 2017

Why Loan Waiver Won’t Help Farmers 

Why Loan Waiver Won’t Help Farmers 
A farmer empties a basin of onions onto a tractor trailer at the Agriculture Produce Market Committee (APMC) wholesale market in Umrana, Maharashtra. (Photographer: Dhiraj Singh/Bloomberg)

Haribhao Govind Phonde applied for a loan waiver after Maharashtra agreed to pardon farmers' debt. But the onion grower from Nashik, some 200 kilometres north-east of Mumbai, said it won't bail him out even as the state started releasing funds for the scheme.

October rains damaged about 60 percent of Phonde's crop. “Traders are unwilling to pay the usual price for the wet produce,” he said at the Vinchur farm auction market at Lasalgaon, home to Asia's largest onion yard.

Chief Minister Devendra Fadnavis tweeted the government released Rs 4,000 crore in the first phase of the Rs 34,000-crore waiver on October 18 as a “Diwali gift”. Yet, farmers BloombergQuint spoke to in Nashik said it isn't a happy festival for them this year. Already under debt, they have lost a bulk of the monsoon crop of soyabean, onions and grapes. Whatever is left won't help recoup costs.

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