HomePolicy AnalysisMaharashtra Clears New Farm Loan Waiver Scheme; Relief for Borrowers, Questions Remain...

Maharashtra Clears New Farm Loan Waiver Scheme; Relief for Borrowers, Questions Remain on Fiscal Cost

Mumbai: In a significant policy decision aimed at addressing rural indebtedness, the Maharashtra Cabinet on Tuesday approved the Punyashlok Ahilyadevi Holkar Shetkari Karjmukti Yojana, a farm debt relief package that combines loan waivers, one-time settlement benefits and incentives for disciplined borrowers. The scheme offers loan waivers of up to ₹2 lakh for eligible farmers and is expected to benefit lakhs of agricultural households across the state. 

The decision comes at a time when farmer organisations continue to raise concerns over rising cultivation costs, climate-related crop losses, fluctuating commodity prices and mounting debt burdens. While the government has described the scheme as a major relief measure, questions remain about its overall fiscal cost, implementation timeline and long-term effectiveness in addressing structural agrarian distress.

What Has the Cabinet Approved?

Under the scheme, farmers with overdue short-term crop loans of up to ₹2 lakh will be eligible for complete debt relief. The waiver covers crop loans taken between April 1, 2019 and March 31, 2025, which remained overdue as of September 30, 2025 and unpaid by March 31, 2026. Notably, the government has removed landholding size as an eligibility criterion, widening the potential beneficiary base. 

The programme is structured around three distinct components:

1. Loan Waiver for Small and Medium Borrowers

Farmers whose total outstanding crop loan dues, including principal and interest, do not exceed ₹2 lakh will receive a complete waiver up to that amount. For many borrowers, this could result in full debt clearance and renewed access to institutional credit. 

2. One-Time Settlement for Larger Defaulters

Farmers whose dues exceed ₹2 lakh will not automatically receive full relief. Instead, they will first have to repay the amount above the ₹2 lakh threshold. Once that payment is made, the government will provide a waiver of ₹2 lakh under a one-time settlement mechanism.

The state has allowed farmers until March 31, 2027 to clear their share of the outstanding dues and become eligible for the benefit. 

3. Incentives for Regular Borrowers

One of the recurring criticisms of loan waiver schemes has been that they reward defaulters while penalising borrowers who repay on time. To address this concern, the Cabinet has included an incentive component.

Farmers who borrowed crop loans and repaid them within stipulated deadlines in at least two of the last three financial years will be eligible for an incentive grant of up to ₹50,000 per farmer, subject to specified conditions. 

Who Will Not Benefit?

The scheme excludes several categories of individuals, including: Income-tax payers, Government employees, Political office-bearers, Officers and employees of cooperative institutions earning above prescribed limits and other specified non-eligible categories. 

The government argues that the exclusion criteria are intended to ensure that benefits reach genuinely distressed farming households. 

Wider Banking Coverage

Unlike some previous debt relief programmes that focused largely on cooperative credit structures, the new scheme extends to loans taken from nationalised banks, private sector banks, regional rural banks, district central cooperative banks and primary agricultural credit societies operating from their own funds.

Farmers will be required to undergo Aadhaar authentication and register on the AgriStack platform for availing benefits. The government also plans to develop a dedicated digital portal for implementation. 

The Fiscal Question

The Cabinet announcement has not yet disclosed the total financial burden of the programme or the number of farmers expected to benefit. These figures will be closely watched by economists, financial institutions and policymakers.

Maharashtra has implemented multiple farm debt relief programmes over the past decade, including the Mahatma Jyotirao Phule Shetkari Karjmukti Yojana. While such measures have often provided immediate relief, they have also placed substantial pressure on state finances.

The latest scheme revives a longstanding debate: should farm distress be addressed primarily through periodic loan waivers, or through structural reforms that improve farm incomes and reduce dependence on debt?

Beyond Loan Waivers

Agricultural experts have consistently pointed to deeper challenges facing Maharashtra’s rural economy: Rising input costs for seeds, fertilisers and diesel, Increasing climate variability and crop losses, inadequate irrigation coverage in several regions, limited price realisation for farmers and dependence on short-term credit cycles.

Critics argue that while loan waivers offer temporary relief, they do not eliminate the conditions that push farmers into debt in the first place.

Supporters, however, contend that in periods of prolonged agrarian stress, debt relief remains necessary to prevent further financial distress and restore farmers’ access to institutional credit.

Questions That Still Need Answers

As the government moves towards implementation, several key questions remain:

  1. What is the total estimated cost of the scheme?
  2. How many farmers are expected to benefit?
  3. How will the state finance the programme?
  4. What safeguards are in place to prevent delays in disbursement?
  5. What complementary measures are planned to reduce future indebtedness?

The answers to these questions may ultimately determine whether the Punyashlok Ahilyadevi Holkar Shetkari Karjmukti Yojana becomes a transformative intervention or another temporary reprieve in Maharashtra’s continuing agrarian crisis. 

Also Read: Could Waterways Become Maharashtra’s Next Infrastructure Frontier After Roads, Metros and Expressways?



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Vivek Bhavsar
Vivek Bhavsarhttps://thenews21.com
Vivek Bhavsar is the Founder and Editor-in-Chief of TheNews21, an independent, reader-supported investigative newsroom based in Mumbai. With over three decades of experience in political and investigative journalism, he has worked with leading English dailies such as The Asian Age and Free Press Journal, as well as prominent regional publications including Lokmat and Saamana. Over the course of his career, he has covered a wide spectrum of beats—from policy-making and governance to urban ecology—before establishing himself as a specialist in political reporting and government decision-making. His work has consistently focused on accountability, public policy, and the inner workings of the state. He is widely recognised for his investigative journalism, particularly his exposés on government corruption and policy irregularities. His reporting on the multi-crore Nanar petrochemical project in Maharashtra’s Konkan region played a significant role in bringing public scrutiny to the project, ultimately leading to its cancellation.

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