forthcoming pen shakti- tamil magazine 

What should women demand from people who stand for TN assembly
elections with regard to micro finance?

Ranjani.K.Murthy

Is it
just that middle/upper class people get loans at 11% interest rate from banks,
while the poor get at 26-40% or above from Non Banking Financing Companies (if
one goes by the reports of the poor who took into account the money collected
initially for membership and insurance)? That too the burden of interest is
borne by poor women from unorganized sector and from dalit, adivasi, Muslim
communities. In fact, I repeatedly get phone calls asking me whether I want a
loan at 13% interest rate, while these poor women- some of who have not had
opportunities to get literacy and numeracy skills- get home visits offering
huge loans for any purpose ranging from food crisis, dowry expenses, health 
expenses,
education expenses, their husbands' production needs, their production needs,
their friends needs and so on at interest rates which are not transparent to
them.  All they have to do is form  a joint liability group of 5 to
15 people depending on the NBFC concerned.  I thought the government was
supposed to meet food needs of the poor through PDS system, health and
education needs of the poor through universal health and education, ensure 100
days of employment in rural areas, implement self employment schemes like SGSY
and is also supposed to form SHGs and federate them under the Mahalir Thittam
scheme.  


A
deeper analysis of the injustice revealed that the government on the one hand
needs to better implement the various schemes (which is not specific to Tamil
Nadu, public health systems here are in fact better in Tamil Nadu than India as
whole), but more shocking were two other factors: priority sector lending was
going into three of the six NBFCs studied and three of the NBFCs had issued
venture capital or Initial public offers or non convertible debentures. That is
poor women had become a ground for investment! As a result of diversion of
priority sector lending the SGSY scheme was poorly implemented in Tamil Nadu,
like the rest of India. 
The huge scam is a failure and lack of accountability of not only the state,
but also the  banks, corporate houses and individuals from India
and abroad who have invested in the NBFCs. It may be worth examining if
investments from the west have increased in the light of financial crisis
there. As some of the NBFCs began as a NGO, it is also a failure of these NGOs
(cannot be generalised to all NGOs).   At a broader level, there is a
crisis in humanism as how can the NBFC staff have the heart to exploit poor
women? One staff collected repayment money and disappeared!


The
scam is not particular to Tamil Nadu, but is happening in other states as well.
Other than Andhra Pradesh where the government has passed an ordinance
regulating the micro finance sector recently, none of the others are yet to
take action and the national bill is still pending. 


What
are the consequences to poor women who could not repay? Several of the women 
from
five districts in the public hearing organized by the All India Democratic
Women’s Association Tamil Nadu Women’s Forum, and Tamil Nadu Dalit women’s
Movement and on 26th February, 2011 in Vellore district reported not
being able to go to work on MNREGS work sites as the profit laundering NBFCs
arrived early in the morning and would not leave. Several reported selling off
their thalis (to them important), mortgaging ration cards/gas cylinders,
selling utensils and gold to repay.  Several reported usage of obscene
words "like sell your body and repay" or "ask your daughter to
sell her body and repay".  Several reported increase in violence
against them by their husbands as the pressure to repay built up, and inability
to sleep in peace.   Some reported being retained in their own house the
whole day till they gathered the repayment amount, and one woman out of thirty
reported that her dress was ripped apart.  A case of a woman who did not
come for the hearing but reported being taken to the NBFC office and released
after husband complained to police was also shared.  Three out of thirty
reported pulling their children out of school and putting them to work to
repay. Two reported being non poor when taking the loan, and becoming poor
after taking one. Some reported being asked to commit suicide so that the life
insurance amount could cover the pending loan (provided relatives said it was
natural death). A case of a woman being asked to repay loan she took for her
friend's family after they absconded was also reported. The NBFCs pitted the
group members against each other, as it was joint liability. The ray of hope
was a Mahalir thittam group telling the NBFCs not to enter their village as
they had seen through the scam. 


While
earlier under the government formed Mahalir Thittam there were occasions
(depending on which NGO had formed the group)  when poor women would unite
to close arrack shops, handle cases of violence, preventing early marriage etc
the NBFCs had divided the poor women through joint liability. In particular
group leaders were given gold coins by the NBFCs if the ensured 100% repayment.
While joint liability is also a feature of the Mahalir thittam, they have the
buffer of collective savings and groups and banks accept  delays in
repayment during festival season or during personal calamities. While one is
not glorifying Mahalir Thittam (poorest do not join if they cannot save, women
in the scheme are harnessed as vote banks by dominant political parties, group
leaders get more loans, deep rooted class, caste and gender hierarchies
persisted), it certainly offered loans at lower interest rate to women and NGO
staff and TNWDC staff under the scheme did not harass poor women like
this.                   
      


What
then should we ask the people who come to us seeking votes? If you have
suggestions write to penn shakti. There is likely to be a state level public
hearing and we could take your advise into account- it would probably be wiser
than mine. 

Immediate
demands to people who stand for elections and from state government could
include (taking leads from the jury[1]
and organizers, but all may not agree with these recommendations- and all
recommendations from jury not included) 

·       
Pass an ordinance that allows only those MFIs
(NBFCs, cooperatives, societies, trusts, producer companies etc) which are
willing to charge less than the rate for rich to function. A cap of 4% like the
much earlier Differential rate of Interest scheme is appropriate. Automatically
the NBFCs and other profit laundering MFIs will leave       

·       
In the interim, bring NBFCs and other MFIs under
the usurious lending act and disseminate information that harassment by NBFCs
and other MFIs charging higher than the rates stipulated under the usurious
lending act can be booked under this act.  

·       
In the interim, disseminate information that
those MFIs directly/indirectly (though other group leaders/members) harassing
women using obscene words/acts can be booked under IPC 341 (Punishment for
Wrongful Restraint), and sections related to words, gestures or actions
intended to insult the modesty of a woman. 


·       
Collectors and state commission for women to set
up a help line for poor women

·       
All cases of suicides and recorded natural
deaths of women in MFIs to be checked whether it is due to harassment by profit
laundering MFIs

·       
Government to provide free legal support for
poor women who are harassed

·       
Regulate insurance so that it is not used to
cover the loan, but the women/spouse concerned. 

·       
Collector to call for monthly meeting of all
MFIs to regulate them 

·       
Collector to call for meetings of all
nationalized banks to ensure that first priority is to fulfill commitment under
SGSY and Mahalir Thittam

·       
Government should not consider lending by banks
to NbFCs, producer companies, NGOs delinked from government programs as
priority sector lending   

Medium  term demands
could include: 

·       
Government should cover 100% poor through
Mahalir Thittam/SGSY scheme (form no savings group so that the poorest can also
join) or restart the individual Differential Rate of Interest (4%) scheme for
poorest and ensure that between all these schemes credit needs of the poor are
started

·       
Peg interest rate to poor at 4% which is below
the rates for the rich.  

·       
Ensure that the budget allocated to government
schemes meets 100% of the credit needs are met through government schemes.   

·       
Implement MNREGS to fullest extent with stipulated
wages.  

·       
Extend SGSY and Employment Guarantee scheme to
urban areas  

·       
Government should impart financial literacy to
poor women, and basic numerical and reading literacy to women who cannot read
and write

·       
Go beyond gender training to groups and federations
to issues include issues of justice based on caste, class, religion, gender
etc. Legal and human rights literacy a must 
   

Long term demands could include: 

·         
Land reform and land given in joint names of
poor women from landless households, dalits, adivasis, Muslims etc. 

·         
Stop privatization of agriculture, forests, in
land water resources, sand,  coasts etc

·         
Invest in agriculture growth with a focus on
strengthening food and nutritional security 

·         
Adopt labour intensive growth models

·         
Give common property resources to
dalit/tribal/Mulsim women/women from landless households  like quarries, ponds, 
lakes, trees, market etc

·         
Give labour contracts, garbage disposal
contracts etc to women’s groups from marginalized communities 

·         
Strengthen public health, education, PDS,
anganwadi system so that poor do not have to go to private sector for these 

·         
Strict implementation of dowry prohibition act,
and curb expenses on marriages, ear piercing ceremonies etc

·         
Put a ceiling on how much assets rich people can
own- the rest they have to give back to society

·       
Do not use MT federations as vote banks but
train them through partner NGos to challenge neo liberal models of growth,
casteism, class hierarchies, exclusion of minorities, and tribals.   

·       
Reform
 TN cooperative Act and make it
mutually aided cooperative Act or have a parallel act along those line 

 










[1]
The jury included Saraswati, Periyarsirimai, 
Nirmala, AIDWA,  Issac Kadirvel,
Ambedkar Mandram and self as an Independent Researcher.   







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