Three
Rs Of Credit
There are three basic
considerations, which must be taken into account before a lending agency decides to agency
decides to advance a loan and the borrower decides to borrow:
- returns from the Proposed Investment,
- repaying capacity, it will generate and
- The risk bearing ability of the
borrower.
These are known as the
Three Rs of credit.
Returns: The First Test
Emphasis here should
be on additional returns and additional costs involved in utilizing the borrowed funds. It
involves working out the optimum combination of farm enterprises and the returns thereof,
resulting from the additional availability of resources made possible through borrowed
funds. The following points
- Estimates of returns should be made on
the basis of resources including borrowed funds.
- Estimates of returns and costs should
be made at the margin, not on an average.
- Not only the MR=MC principles be kept
in view while deciding the amount of credit but the law of equi-marginal returns must be
fully exploited.
- The level of other resources should be
considered before deciding upon the amount of working capital tobe used. The possibilities
of enhancing the level of other most limiting resources to farm production should also be
examined.
- Due care should be taken that more than
the required amount of money is not advanced or obtained. At the same time, an inadequate
amount of funds would not serve the purpose. Funds should, therefore, be advanced neither
inadequately or excessively, but just the amount that can be profitably used.
- Money needed for consumption purposes
should also be considered for their marginal value to the farm-family satisfaction against
the marginal productivity of the production loans.
Repaying Capacity-The Second Test
Although necessary, it
is not sufficient to only analyse the productivity or the additional returns that will
accrue due to the borrowed funds. A loan may be productive but still it may not generate
sufficient income to leave funds sufficient enough to repay the loan. Repaying capacity is
the portion of the amount that a farm family will earn from a years operation, which
shall be available for the repayment of the loan. It should be based on an estimate of
anticipated income from all sources of the borrower during the year. Repaying capacity, is
therefore, worked out as a residual after meeting the requirements of the family
consumption and payment of other dues, debts and repayments.
There can be two types
of loans
Self liquidating,
Non-liquidating or
partially self-liquidating loans.
The repaying capacity
should be determined separately for self-liquidating and non-liquidating loans.
In case of the
self-liquidating loans the amount gets absorbed in the production process in one year or
production period and the formula here is:
Repaying capacity=
Gross Income- [Living expenses+Working expenses (not including loan) + taxes + other loans
and payments].
In case of
non-liquidating or partially liquidating loans, the resource acquired with the funds are
not directly consumer or are consumed over a number of years. They do not become
completely a part of the first years costs and the returns from the investment are
spread over a period of several years. For non-liquidating or partially liquidating loans,
the repaying capacity is worked out as
Repaying capacity=
gross cash income- (all working expenses+ other loans+taxes and payments due).
Risk Bearing Ability-The Third Test
It is necessary but
again not sufficient that the credit should be productive and generate sufficient repaying
capacity. It is also essential that the borrower should be able to withstand the shocks of
probable financial losses. This is known as the risk-bearing ability of the borrower.
Assessment of risk-bearing ability is necessary because the returns and repaying capacity
analysis are made on the basis of averages. i.e., estimated production, prices and costs
etc. but these averages seldom hold true. Agricultural business is subject to the vagaries
of nature ad is exposed to many other hazards such as pest attacks, diseases and price
fluctuations. Variations in income occur as a rule rather than an exception. The
variability in income has, therefore, to be counted for in order to arrive at a fairly
stable and reliable estimate of the repaying capacity.
The overall
variability in returns has been estimated to be 21% in Ludhiana district. Such variability
coefficients are needed especially by the financial organizations in all parts of the
country where they wish to operate. The gross income should be deflated by this
coefficient and the analysis should the follow the same pattern as for repaying capacity. |