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    Home»Finance»EAC-PM Working Paper: Priority Sector Lending Drives Inclusion, But Top-Down Mandates Fail to Guarantee District Growth
    Finance

    EAC-PM Working Paper: Priority Sector Lending Drives Inclusion, But Top-Down Mandates Fail to Guarantee District Growth

    Aruna KaimBy Aruna KaimMay 25, 2026No Comments3 Mins Read
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    A working paper released by the Economic Advisory Council to the Prime Minister (EAC-PM), titled “Economic impact analysis of Priority Sector Lending,” delivers a nuanced critique of India’s decades-old directed credit policy. The report establishes that while the Priority Sector Lending (PSL) framework has successfully advanced financial inclusion and curbed rural poverty, aggressively forcing credit into underdeveloped regions via top-down bank mandates does not automatically trigger localized economic growth.

    The Structural Trade-Off: Inclusion vs. Productivity

    The PSL framework mandates that commercial banks direct a minimum of 40% of their Adjusted Net Bank Credit (ANBC) toward specified priority sectors—including agriculture, micro-enterprises, education, housing, and weaker socio-economic sections.

    The EAC-PM report balances the historic social victories of this system against modern macroeconomic trade-offs:

    • The Positive Impact: Five decades of directed credit have successfully corrected systemic market failures, resulting in a measurable decline in rural poverty, increased agricultural capital investment, and improved performance among micro-enterprises.

    • The Systemic Risks: The council cautions that over-expansion or misdirection of credit carries severe hidden costs. Funneling capital into structurally unviable or inefficient sectors harms Total Factor Productivity (TFP). Furthermore, it directly impacts commercial bank profitability due to higher loan management costs and an elevated risk of asset defaults.

    Key Finding: The Two-Year Growth Disconnect

    To evaluate the actual economic output driven by these loans, the EAC-PM analyzed district-level quarterly data from the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) spanning 2020 to 2025.

    The Methodology: The study utilized night-time luminosity (satellite data mapping night lights) as a precise, objective proxy for real-world localized economic activity and output growth.

    The data revealed a stark disconnect over a short-to-medium-term horizon:

    Metrics and Horizons Observed Data Trends & Elasticity
    Two-Year Output Impact A statistical increase in the growth rate of Priority Sector Advances (PSAs) does not significantly accelerate a district’s economic output over a two-year horizon.
    The Poorest Districts (Bottom 10%) The bottom 10th percentile of districts—measured by outstanding PSAs—exhibited the lowest growth elasticity relative to credit injection compared to all other district tiers.

    The paper concludes that a blanket, top-down mandate forcing commercial banks to pump excess credit into the poorest districts is an inefficient mechanism for generating growth. Instead of treating credit as a standalone solution, the report advocates for targeted, holistic structural interventions that resolve fundamental developmental bottlenecks alongside financial access.

    PSLCs: Balancing Bank Risk Without Regional Distortion

    The working paper also reviewed the operational efficiency of Priority Sector Lending Certificates (PSLCs), which were introduced by the RBI in 2016. PSLCs enable banks that overshoot their PSL targets to sell their surplus achievements to shortfall banks via an online market-driven platform.

    The EAC-PM’s empirical analysis confirms that the PSLC mechanism achieves its core structural goals:

    1. Risk Mitigation: It allows specialized banks to lend aggressively within their core competencies (e.g., agricultural lending) and monetize that expertise without transferring the underlying credit risk or asset title to buyer banks.

    2. Neutral Footprint: The trading of these certificates helps protect bank profit margins against default risks without causing regional distortions in the physical distribution of credit or altering localized output growth.

    The Takeaway

    The EAC-PM’s findings suggest that while credit is a vital lubricant for financial equity, it cannot act as a substitute for physical infrastructure, market linkages, and local industrial capacity. For true economic compounding at the grassroots level, policy must shift from simply enforcing credit volume targets to building viable local economic ecosystems.

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    Aruna Kaim

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