Rehman is a poor agricultural labour and needs a loan for cultivation on his small piece of land. which of the following would definitely offer him a fair interest rate and flexible terms of credit? 1 a. village moneylender b. cooperative society c. commercial bank d. rich landowner

  1. SECTION A MCQ (1X20=20) 1. Rehman is a poor agricultural labour and needs..
  2. Agricultural Credit: Definition and Types of Credit Vehicles
  3. Problems of Agricultural Credit in India (with Suggested Remedies)
  4. Labour on the farm
  5. Is credit the devil in the agriculture? The role of credit in Pakistan's agricultural sector
  6. Agriculture in Southern Mozambique, an Activity Based on Labour Migration
  7. Labour on the farm
  8. Problems of Agricultural Credit in India (with Suggested Remedies)
  9. SECTION A MCQ (1X20=20) 1. Rehman is a poor agricultural labour and needs..
  10. Agricultural Credit: Definition and Types of Credit Vehicles


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SECTION A MCQ (1X20=20) 1. Rehman is a poor agricultural labour and needs..

SECTION A MCQ (1X20=20) 1. Rehman is a poor agricultural labour and needs a loan for cultivation on his small piece of land. Which of the following would DEFINITFLY offer him a fair interest rate and flexible terms of credit? • village moneylender • cooperative society • commercial bank • rich landowner SECTION A MCQ (1X20=20) 1. Rehman is a poor agricultural labour and needs a loan for cultivation on his small piece of land. Which of the following would DEFINITFLY offer him a fair interest rate and flexible terms of credit? Updated On Jan 27, 2023 Topic All topics Subject Mental ability Class Class 10 Answer Type Video solution: 1 Upvotes 113 Avg. Video Duration 8 min

Agricultural Credit: Definition and Types of Credit Vehicles

• Agricultural credit refers to one of several credit vehicles used to finance agricultural transactions such as a loan, note, bill of exchange, or a banker's acceptance. • Financing is specially adapted to the specific financial needs of farmers. • It allows them to secure equipment, plant, harvest, marketing, and do other things required to keep farms running or diversify. • Credit needs to be available on competitive terms to allow farmers who operate in a free market economy to compete with farms that receive subsidies. How Agricultural Credit Works When someone needs credit, they often turn to banks for loans or other credit vehicles. Some industries have special facilities set aside through certain

Problems of Agricultural Credit in India (with Suggested Remedies)

Problems of Agricultural Credit in India with Suggested Remedies! Agricultural Credit: An average Indian farmer, who has to work on an uneconomic holding’, using traditional methods of cultivation and being exposed to the risks of a poor agricultural season is almost always in debt. He is a perennial debtor. Once the farmer falls into debt due to crop failure or low prices of crops or malpractices of moneylenders he can never come out of it. In fact, large part of the liabilities of farmers is ‘ancestral debt’. Thus, along with his landed property, he passes on his debt to the next generation. There are four main causes of rural indebted­ness in India: ADVERTISEMENTS: In a few cases, the bad habits of the farmers (such as gambling, drinking, etc.) are responsible for his burden of ‘unproductive’ debt. However, in most cases, the cause of the debt may be some expensive social ceremony which the farmer was perhaps forced to “arrange for fear of a social boy­cott”. Need for Finance: Finance is required by farmers not only for the production and marketing of crops but also to keep a stagnant agricultural economy alive. Most Indian farmers live near the brink of starvation. A bad monsoon, a poor harvest, an accident or ill­ness in the family forces him to approach the mon­eylender for a loan. In India, there is the prepon­derance of such ‘distress’ or unproductive loans. Agricultural finance in India is not just one re­quirement of the agricultural business but a symp­tom of th...

Labour on the farm

The first draft of A Small Farm Future had a chapter called ‘Labour on the farm’ which didn’t make the final version. I needed to cut the length, and although there were parts of this chapter I was quite attached to, I felt I hadn’t nailed the issues as well as I’d like, so it was easy to spike. Some passages found their way into other parts of the book, but I’d been hoping to make good on the issue in this blog cycle with parts of the deleted chapter and my own more polished thoughts. Trouble is, I still don’t feel I’ve nailed this issue sufficiently. So instead I offer this post as a placeholder for a more distant day when I hope I can offer something more up to scratch. What I’ll do here instead is provide a few brief thoughts on the topic prompted by a deeper dive I took recently into Francesca Bray’s fascinating book The Rice Economies (University of California Press, 1986) – an old book, but a very good one. Then I’m hoping I can come back in the future with something a bit more expansive. A key organizing theme in Bray’s book is her contention that wheat in western countries and dryland cereal crops in general offer economies of scale in production that don’t exist in the case of the wet rice cultivation that dominates much of the populous regions of East, South and Southeast Asia. The combination of relatively scarce labour and relatively abundant land in the west (albeit that the latter was too often a function of colonial dispossession) created a dynamic of labou...

Is credit the devil in the agriculture? The role of credit in Pakistan's agricultural sector

The aim of this study was to use an econometric analysis to investigate the relationship between the agricultural gross domestic product (AGDP) and variables, such as total food production, cropped area, loan disbursed by ZTBL, cooperative loan and total loan disbursed by various institutions in Pakistan. Data were explored from 1960 to 2015; we used time series data collected from secondary sources, including the Pakistan Bureau of Statistics, Statistical Year Books and the Economic Survey of Pakistan. Data were analysed using the Phillips–Perron (P–P) test, and the results were interpreted using the Johansen Co-integration test. We found that total food production, loan disbursed by ZTBL and the total loan disbursed by various institutions had a positive and significant influence on the AGDP, whereas cropped area and cooperatives loan had a negative but insignificant influence on the AGDP. Based on our results, we suggest that the Government of Pakistan formulate and initiate new policies and funding schemes for the development and improvement of the agricultural sector. • Previous article in issue • Next article in issue • About ScienceDirect • Remote access • Shopping cart • Advertise • Contact and support • Terms and conditions • Privacy policy We use cookies to help provide and enhance our service and tailor content and ads. By continuing you agree to the use of cookies. Copyright © 2023 Elsevier B.V. or its licensors or contributors. ScienceDirect® is a registered t...

Agriculture in Southern Mozambique, an Activity Based on Labour Migration

The economic embargo enforced by ReNaMo (Resistência Nacional Moçambicana, i.e., Mozambican National Resistance) led the socialist government during the 4th Frelimo Congress (1983) to enter into non-aggression pacts with the RSA (Nkomati Agreement 1984) and to undertake reforms in State sectors. • 7. • Abrahamsson H, Nilsson A (1995) Mozambique the troubled transition, from socialist construction to free market capitalism. Zed Books, London, 285 p • Almeida A (1959) Monografia agricola de Massinga (posto-sede). Memorias da Junta de Investigaçoes do Ultramar, 10 • Amin S (1976) Unequal development. An essay on the social formations of peripheral capitalism. Monthly Review Press, New York/London, 440 p • Antoine P, Bonvalet C, Courgeau D, Dureau F, Lelièvre E (2009) Biographies d’enquêtes, bilan de 14 collectes biographiques. Ined, Paris, 340 p • Baber R (1996) Current livelihoods in semi-arid rural areas of South Africa. In: Ellis F, Lipton M (eds) Land, labour and rural livelihoods in South Africa. Indicator Press, Durban, pp 269–302 • Black R, Ammassari S, Hilker LM, Mouillesseaux S, Pooley C, Rajkotia R (2004) Migration and pro-poor policies in sub-Saharan Africa. Department for International Development, London • Black R, Crush J, Peberdy S (2006) Migration and development in Africa: an overview. African migration and development series. IDASA, Cape Town • Burger R, Woolard I (2005) The state of the labour market in South Africa after the first decade of democracy, CSSR...

Labour on the farm

The first draft of A Small Farm Future had a chapter called ‘Labour on the farm’ which didn’t make the final version. I needed to cut the length, and although there were parts of this chapter I was quite attached to, I felt I hadn’t nailed the issues as well as I’d like, so it was easy to spike. Some passages found their way into other parts of the book, but I’d been hoping to make good on the issue in this blog cycle with parts of the deleted chapter and my own more polished thoughts. Trouble is, I still don’t feel I’ve nailed this issue sufficiently. So instead I offer this post as a placeholder for a more distant day when I hope I can offer something more up to scratch. What I’ll do here instead is provide a few brief thoughts on the topic prompted by a deeper dive I took recently into Francesca Bray’s fascinating book The Rice Economies (University of California Press, 1986) – an old book, but a very good one. Then I’m hoping I can come back in the future with something a bit more expansive. A key organizing theme in Bray’s book is her contention that wheat in western countries and dryland cereal crops in general offer economies of scale in production that don’t exist in the case of the wet rice cultivation that dominates much of the populous regions of East, South and Southeast Asia. The combination of relatively scarce labour and relatively abundant land in the west (albeit that the latter was too often a function of colonial dispossession) created a dynamic of labou...

Problems of Agricultural Credit in India (with Suggested Remedies)

Problems of Agricultural Credit in India with Suggested Remedies! Agricultural Credit: An average Indian farmer, who has to work on an uneconomic holding’, using traditional methods of cultivation and being exposed to the risks of a poor agricultural season is almost always in debt. He is a perennial debtor. Once the farmer falls into debt due to crop failure or low prices of crops or malpractices of moneylenders he can never come out of it. In fact, large part of the liabilities of farmers is ‘ancestral debt’. Thus, along with his landed property, he passes on his debt to the next generation. There are four main causes of rural indebted­ness in India: ADVERTISEMENTS: In a few cases, the bad habits of the farmers (such as gambling, drinking, etc.) are responsible for his burden of ‘unproductive’ debt. However, in most cases, the cause of the debt may be some expensive social ceremony which the farmer was perhaps forced to “arrange for fear of a social boy­cott”. Need for Finance: Finance is required by farmers not only for the production and marketing of crops but also to keep a stagnant agricultural economy alive. Most Indian farmers live near the brink of starvation. A bad monsoon, a poor harvest, an accident or ill­ness in the family forces him to approach the mon­eylender for a loan. In India, there is the prepon­derance of such ‘distress’ or unproductive loans. Agricultural finance in India is not just one re­quirement of the agricultural business but a symp­tom of th...

SECTION A MCQ (1X20=20) 1. Rehman is a poor agricultural labour and needs..

SECTION A MCQ (1X20=20) 1. Rehman is a poor agricultural labour and needs a loan for cultivation on his small piece of land. Which of the following would DEFINITFLY offer him a fair interest rate and flexible terms of credit? • village moneylender • cooperative society • commercial bank • rich landowner Views: 6,041 ( 3 × 5 − 15 ) ] 25. Different groups interpretod Swaraj differently daring non-cokpenation movenemt Explain. 26. Tounsm industry is rapdily growing in India. Comment 27. Explain some fictors which have enabled giobelioation in india. 28. Democnicy is accountable, responsive and legitimate grvemment Lanify 29. Tertiary sector is pluying a dominatingrole in the GDP of india Fxplain. SECTION - D [LONGANSWER BASED QL ESIHONS ( 5 × 4 = 20 )] SECTION A MCQ (1X20=20) 1. Rehman is a poor agricultural labour and needs a loan for cultivation on his small piece of land. Which of the following would DEFINITFLY offer him a fair interest rate and flexible terms of credit? Updated On Jan 27, 2023 Topic All topics Subject Mental ability Class Class 10 Answer Type Video solution: 1 Upvotes 113 Avg. Video Duration 8 min

Agricultural Credit: Definition and Types of Credit Vehicles

• Agricultural credit refers to one of several credit vehicles used to finance agricultural transactions such as a loan, note, bill of exchange, or a banker's acceptance. • Financing is specially adapted to the specific financial needs of farmers. • It allows them to secure equipment, plant, harvest, marketing, and do other things required to keep farms running or diversify. • Credit needs to be available on competitive terms to allow farmers who operate in a free market economy to compete with farms that receive subsidies. How Agricultural Credit Works When someone needs credit, they often turn to banks for loans or other credit vehicles. Some industries have special facilities set aside through certain

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