Two-tier Co-operative Credit Structure in Manipur: An Overview

2015 ◽  
Vol 60 (2) ◽  
pp. 283
Author(s):  
Janee Yumlembam ◽  
Ram Singh ◽  
S. M. Feroze
Keyword(s):  
1981 ◽  
Vol 37 (3) ◽  
pp. 359-388 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ashutosh Varshney

The problem of economic aid requires a comprehensive reassessment. Apart from the shortcomings of the existing studies, a few other developments, having their origins in the seventies, have made this imperative. Firstly, consequent upon the intensified theme of transfer of resources under the demand for a new international economic order and the increasing vulnerability of the international credit structure, the issue of aid has reentered the core of the development debate. The Brandt Commission Report as well as some other development documents have amply recognized this.1 Secondly, the discipline of international relations has witnessed a paradigm shift towards political economy,2 bringing along some new methodological insights which can be used to overcome the limitations of the available studies.3 Of the many such approaches offered,4 the structural approach has been found to be exceedingly useful particularly with regard to problems like trade, technology and private capital.5 Aid so far has escaped its application. This paper seeks to fill this gap by attempting a two-fold reconstruction, theoretical and empirical.


2019 ◽  
Vol 7 (2) ◽  
pp. 68-74
Author(s):  
Harish Tigari ◽  
M G Gaganadeepa

The rural banking is one of the important roles in rural development of our country, and the village economy is the backbone of the Indian economy. Without the development of the rural economy, the objective of economic planning cannot be achieved. Hence the Regional rural banks (RRBs) are plays a vital role in the rural development for the economy in India.  The RRBs were established on October 2, 1975, with the main objective of a provisional credit to rural people who are not economically strong enough, especially the small farmers, artisans, agricultural laborers, and even small entrepreneurs. The present study is a modest attempt to rural credit structure and the role played by RRBs in the development of rural economy. The present research paper is designed in nature and makes use of secondary data. The relevant secondary data have been collected mainly through the articles, journals, books, and websites have been referred. This paper is to examine the rural credit structure in RRBs of Pragathi Krishna Gramin Bank. And this study is focused only on the specific area like loans and advances made by the RRBs for three years period of 2015-16 to the year 2017-18.


2018 ◽  
Vol 7 (1) ◽  
pp. 57-62
Author(s):  
P. Selvaraju

Co-operative banks in India have come a long way since the enactment of the Agricultural Credit Co-operative Societies Act in 1904. The century old co-operative banking structure is viewed as an important instrument of ba62nking access to the rural masses and thus a vehicle for democratization of the Indian financial system. Co-operative Banking is an agency which, in the words of Henry Wolff , “is in a position to deal with small man on its terms, accepting his security he has and without drawing on the protection of the rich, that the agency must not be channel for pouring charity or subsidizing the small man out of the public funds, instead, the material help must be backed by moral improvement and strengthening of the fiber”. Today, short term co-operative credit structure has 32 state co-operative banks and 371 district central co-operative banks operating through 14907 branches. There were 92,996 Primary Agricultural Credit Societies (PACS) as on March 31, 2014 at the grass root level catering to the credit requirements of the members but also providing several non-financial services like input supply, storage and marketing of produce, supply of consumer goods, etc. The journey has not been smooth for the co-operative banking structure. This analysis has been made based on the various data given by Reserve Bank of India (RBI) to trace out the current trend of the co-operative credit institutions also includes the issues and challenges of the two and three tier credit structure of co-operative credit.


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