Abstract:
The study analyzed the constraints faced by the farmers to rural credit by utilizing
two household level data sets. The first survey Pakistan Rural Household Survey
(PRHS) 2001 was utilized to study the purpose, source structure and utilization of
rural credit and; the second which covered nearly 160 households from
Sargodha District 2007 was used to calculate the demand and interest rate
function by applying Heckman two stage procedures. The focus of this study was
to find out the affect of credit constraints of institutional credit on consumption
and production pattern of the rural farm households. After measuring the
probability of being constrained used to study affect on consumption pattern of
farmers who were credit constraint. The frontier production function was used to
study the affect of credit constrained and un-constrained farmers.
The analysis revealed that agricultural production loan was found as 45.8
percent. ZTBL was providing most of the loan to the farmers for their agricultural
needs. The interest was ranging between 10 to 20 percent in all agro-climatic
regions. The logit model was applied to determine the nominal interest rate and
borrowing function of the farmers. The results showed that the transitory income,
predicted interest rate, and farm size were significant. Credit constraints were
determined by using Heckman’s two stage procedure. The results showed that
the coefficient of education of male household was significant showing that
education function as a facilitator to enter into credit market. The farmers faced
many constraints namely: lower literacy rate, small and fragmented holdings,
uneven access to agricultural extension and information and in ability to obtain
adequate irrigation water, less access to agriculture credit institutions, and
inequitable distribution of land and water. The results of the frontier production
revealed that credit users and non credit users were allocatively inefficient,
especially irrigation water. The mean technical efficiency of credit users was 90
and that of non-credit users was 79 percent, respectively. The high technical
efficiency of credit users was attributed to better market access to the farmers to
new technology through the availability of agricultural credit. The low level of
technical efficiency of non-credit users as compared to credit users implied that
potential for improvement exists. The high technical efficiency of credit users
was safely attributed to credit availability through which farmers have an access
to new technology. With respect to policy implication, the study suggested that
development and dissemination of low cost and site-specific production
technologies for the farmers. In this regard formation of Credit Assessment
Bureaus for the risk assessment of the borrowers as it done in urban areas.
Better dissemination of information and technology for improved decision making
regarding use of credit.