Income Tax Return Filing in India
Income Tax Return (ITR) is a form that you fill out to disclose the details of your earnings from different sources and pay taxes to the Income Tax Department. ITRs include all information about an individual's earnings and tax-saving investments for a given financial year. Benefits of Filing Income Tax Returns Proper Documentation of Financials To Avoid Notice from the Income Tax Authority Carry Forward Losses Income Tax Refund For Speedy Visa Processing Click here to know more - Income…
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http://www.strategy-business.com/article/10310?pg=1
This segment is a good market - in the sense that it is a felt need. At the same time, given the Indian culture, particularly , political, it is a challenging task. Your concerns are shared by the States like Andhra Pradesh, West Bengal and Kerala where the problem of higher interest rates and employment of recovery agents for recovery have drawn official responses resulting in the review by RBI.
I believe the solution lies in strengthening rural markets so that the rural poor have chances for poverty alleviation within their command area than relying on increasing the cost of marketing by looking to urban markets. In India, we need to move from Metropolitization to Ruralization - providing self sufficient communities, who can expect to achieve a reasonable standard of living. Development of SEZ will provide a good market for the farmers - but this will, initially, at least need government intervention.
There are connected issues here as well. Such as the inflationary trends in basic food prices.
Well, are there solutions that do not create fresh problems?
I am veering round to the conclusion that life is one of managing solutions, not problems!
My concern is that though it looks like the government has finally acknowledged the problems, they will again do the paper policies and there will be no change at the farmer level. And we will have to see many more suicides by the farmers.
What do you say?
Sonia
Government has been doing a lot - both on disbursement and waivers - which has been a contentious issue with commercial bankers. While the disbursements to weaker sections have been encouraged by a carrot and stick approach using targets and subsidised interest rates, the waivers have been a dampener in terms of repayment psychology of the borrowers.
The Micro Finance domain is a sensitive and challenging area. As Deepak points out, if social uplift is the primary objective of Micro Finance, the profit motive becomes an anathema.
For a healthy growth of MFI sector, I believe there is a need for a balance between the social objective and profitabillity to ensure sustainability of MFI operations. That in the first place was the basis for certain target oriented lending approach - a policy stance adopted by the RBI. It is also not fair to ask the poor to bear the cost of their uplift by charging a hefty margin, though they should be morally inclined to pay back the society during their prosperity. Setting up of the committee by theRBI to review the position, in my interpretation, reflects this stance.
NABARD is the natural choice for regulatory role as it is the key player in formulating the schemes for social uplift in the context of rural poverty. In fact, the legislation on MFIs should necessarily include tenets of financial inclusion that also touchbases with urban poor.
At the end of the day, if MFIs are able to reach out to the rural poor, energise them to achieve liberation from the debt trap and still make a decent margin through improved reach, business processes and a commitment to sustained service, such MFIs should be allowed to flourish within the accepted banking practices for credit delivery and recovery.
MFI is essentially engaged in a banking activity and thus required to be brought under the purview of RBI regulatory framework keeping in view the specific objectives for which the MFIs are estabilshed in the first place.
My two cents...
Seshadri
Sonia
1. First profit making MFIs should not be allowed to operate as this will always lead to malpractice in the industry and if not possible then major percentage should go back to borrowers as relief or rebate.
2. Interest rate should come down. Benefit of priority sector interest rate enjoyed by MFIs should be passed on to its borrowers.
3. Part of profit should go back to these borrowers rather than entire thing going to investors.
4. Licensing should be stricter and only a few MFIs should be allowed to operate in a region avoiding unnecessary competition between them.
5. Financial discipline should be brought to the sector in terms of reporting correct numbers, strict audit controls preferably C&AG allotted audits and other control to ensure reported numbers are authentic.
6. Finally a strict regulator like RBI.
Hope these measures help industry to win its respect back and remove vultures out of this industry.
RBI has set a committee for establishing new norms.
SIDBi takes responsibility for not monitoring MFI's properly.
The latest headline - NABARD expected to control MFI's soon.
What do you think should be done and will happen?