RBI/2016-17/9
FIDD.GSSD.CO.BC.No.07/09.01.01/2016-17
July 01, 2016
The Chairman/ Managing Director
All Scheduled Commercial Banks
Dear Sir/Madam,
Master Circular – Deendayal Antyodaya Yojana -
National Rural Livelihoods Mission (DAY-NRLM)
Please refer to the Master Circular FIDD.GSSD.CO.BC.No.09/09.01.01/2015-16
dated July 30, 2015 consolidating guidelines / instructions / directions issued
to banks with regards to National Rural Livelihoods Mission. Ministry of Rural
Development, Department of Rural Development, Government of India vide their
letter dated March 29, 2016 has renamed National Rural Livelihoods Mission(NRLM)
as Deendayal Antyodaya Yojana - National Rural Livelihoods Mission(DAY-NRLM).The
Master Circular has been suitably updated by incorporating the instructions on
DAY-NRLM issued up to June 30, 2016, which are listed in the Appendix and also
been placed on website (https://www.rbi.org.in).
Please acknowledge receipt.
A copy of Master Circular is enclosed.
Yours faithfully,
(Uma Shankar)
Chief General Manager
Encls: As above
Master Circular
Deendayal Antyodaya Yojana - National Rural
Livelihoods Mission ( DAY-NRLM)
1. Background
1.1 The Ministry of Rural Development, Government of India launched a new
programme known as NRLM now renamed as Deendayal Antyodaya Yojana - National
Rural Livelihoods Mission (DAY-NRLM),by restructuring and replacing the
Swarnjayanti Gram Swarozgar Yojana (SGSY) scheme with effect from April 01,
2013. Detailed ‘Guidelines’ were circulated to all Scheduled Commercial Banks
including Regional Rural Banks vide RBI circular
RPCD.GSSD.CO.No.81/09.01.03/2012-13 dated June 27, 2013.
1.2 DAY-NRLM (renamed as DAY-NRLM w.e.f. March 29, 2016) is the flagship program
of Govt. of India for promoting poverty reduction through building strong
institutions of the poor, particularly women, and enabling these institutions to
access a range of financial services and livelihoods services. DAY-NRLM is
designed to be a highly intensive program and focuses on intensive application
of human and material resources in order to mobilize the poor into functionally
effective community owned institutions, promote their financial inclusion and
strengthen their livelihoods. DAY-NRLM complements these institutional platforms
of the poor with services that include financial and capital services,
production and productivity enhancement services, technology, knowledge, skills
and inputs, market linkage, etc. The community institutions also offer a
platform for convergence and partnerships with various stakeholders by building
environment for the poor to access their rights and entitlements and public
service.
1.3 A women’s self-help group, coming together on the basis of mutual affinity
is the primary building block of the DAY-NRLM community institutional design.
DAY-NRLM focuses on building, nurturing and strengthening the institutions of
the poor women, including the SHGs and their Federations at village and higher
levels. In addition, DAY-NRLM will promote livelihoods institutions of rural
poor. The mission will provide a continuous hand-holding support to the
institutions of poor for a period of 5 – 7 years till they come out of abject
poverty. The community institutional architecture put in place under DAY-NRLM
will provide support for a much longer duration and of a greater intensity.
1.4 The support from DAY-NRLM will include all round capacity building of the
SHGs ensuring that the group functions effectively on all issues concerning
their members, financial management, providing them with initial fund support to
address vulnerabilities and high cost indebtedness, formation and nurturing of
SHG federations, making the federations evolve as strong support organizations,
making livelihoods of the poor sustainable, formation and nurturing of
livelihoods organizations, skill development of the rural youth to start their
own enterprises or take up jobs in organized sector, enabling these institutions
to access their entitlements from the key line departments, etc.
1.5 The implementation of DAY-NRLM has been in a Mission Mode since April, 2013.
DAY-NRLM adopts a demand driven approach, enabling the States to formulate their
own State specific poverty reduction action plans. DAY-NRLM enables the State
rural livelihoods missions to professionalize their human resources at State,
district and block level. The State missions are capacitated to deliver a wide
range of quality services to the rural poor. DAY-NRLM emphasises continuous
capacity building, imparting requisite skills and creating linkages with
livelihoods opportunities for the poor, including those emerging in the
organized sector, and monitoring against targets of poverty reduction outcomes.
The blocks and districts in which all the components of DAY-NRLM will be
implemented, either through the SRLMs or partner institutions or NGOs, will be
the intensive blocks and districts, whereas remaining will be non-intensive
blocks and districts. The selection of intensive districts will be done by the
states based on the demographic vulnerabilities. It will be rolled out in a
phased manner over the next 7 - 8 years. All blocks in the country will become
intensive blocks over time. The key features of DAY-NRLM have been furnished in
Annex I. The key difference from SGSY have been listed in Annex II.
2. Women SHGs and their Federations
2.1 Women SHGs under DAY-NRLM consist of 10-15 persons. In case of special
SHGs i.e. groups in the difficult areas, groups with disabled persons, and
groups formed in remote tribal areas, this number may be a minimum of 5 persons.
2.2 DAY-NRLM will promote affinity based women Self –help groups.
2.3 Only for groups to be formed with Persons with disabilities, and other
special categories like elders, transgenders, DAY-NRLM will have both men and
women in the self-help groups.
2.4 SHG is an informal group and registration under any Societies Act, State
cooperative Act or a partnership firm is not mandatory vide Circular RPCD. No.
Plan BC.13/PL-09.22/90-91 dated July 24th, 1991. However Federations of SHGs
formed at village level, cluster level, and at higher levels are to be
registered under appropriate acts prevailing in their States.
Financial Assistance to the SHGs
3. Revolving Fund (RF): DAY-NRLM would provide Revolving Fund (RF) support to
SHGs in existence for a minimum period of 3/6 months and follow the norms of
good SHGs, i.e. they follow ‘Panchasutra’ – regular meetings, regular savings,
regular internal lending, regular recoveries and maintenance of proper books of
accounts. Only such SHGs that have not received any RF earlier will be provided
with RF, as corpus, with a minimum of Rs. 10, 000 and up to a maximum of Rs. 15,000
per SHG. The purpose of RF is to strengthen their institutional and financial
management capacity and build a good credit history within the group.
4. Capital Subsidy has been discontinued under DAY-NRLM:
No Capital Subsidy will be sanctioned to any SHG from the date of implementation
of DAY-NRLM.
5. Community Investment support Fund (CIF)
CIF will be provided to the SHGs in the intensive blocks, routed through the
Village level/ Cluster level Federations, to be maintained in perpetuity by the
Federations. The CIF will be used, by the Federations, to advance loans to the
SHGs and/or to undertake the common/collective socio-economic activities.
6. Introduction of Interest subvention:
DAY-NRLM has a provision for interest subvention, to cover the difference
between the Lending Rate of the banks and 7%, on all credit from the banks/
financial institutions availed by women SHGs, for a maximum of Rs. 3,00,000 per
SHG. This will be available across the country in two ways:
(i) In 150 identified districts, banks will lend to the women SHGs @7% up to an
aggregated loan amount of Rs. 3,00,000/-.The SHGs will also get additional
interest subvention of 3% on prompt payment, reducing the effective rate of
interest to 4%.
(ii) In the remaining districts also, DAY-NRLM compliant women SHGs will be
registered with SRLMs. These SHGs are eligible for interest subvention to the
extent of difference between the lending rates and 7% for the loan up to Rs. 3
lakhs, subjected to the norms prescribed by the respective SRLMs. This part of
the scheme will be operationalized by SRLMs.
(A separate circular on January 21, 2016 was issued to all Public Sector Banks
containing the detailed guidelines on interest subvention and its
operationalization across the country for the year 2015-16 along with the list
of 150 identified districts. Letters were issued to select Private Sector Banks.
Salient features and the implementation procedure of the Scheme are enclosed in
Annex III. Interest subvention for subsequent years will be communicated
separately to the banks by GOI/RBI).
7. Role of banks:
7.1 Opening of Savings accounts: The role of banks would commence with opening
of accounts for all the Women SHGs, SHGs with members of Disability and the
Federations of the SHGs. The ‘Know Your Customer’ (KYC) norms as specified from
time to time by Reserve Bank of India are applicable for identification of the
customers.
7.2 Lending Norms:
7.2.1 The eligibility criteria for the SHGs to avail loans:
• SHG should be in active existence at least since the last 6 months as per the
books of account of SHGs and not from the date of opening of S/B account.
• SHG should be practicing ‘Panchasutras’ i.e. Regular meetings; Regular
savings; Regular inter-loaning; Timely repayment; and Up-to-date books of
accounts;
• Qualified as per grading norms fixed by NABARD. As and when the federations of
the SHGs come to existence, the grading exercise can be done by the Federations
to support the Banks.
• The existing defunct SHGs are also eligible for credit if they are revived and
continue to be active for a minimum period of 3 months.
7.2.2 Loan amount: Emphasis is laid on the multiple doses of assistance under
DAY-NRLM. This would mean assisting an SHG over a period of time, through repeat
doses of credit, to enable them to access higher amounts of credit for taking up
sustainable livelihoods and improve on the quality of life. The amount of
various doses of credit should be as follows:
• First dose: 4-8 times to the proposed corpus during the year or Rs. 50,000
whichever is higher.
• Second dose: 5-10 times of existing corpus and proposed saving during the next
twelve months or Rs. 1 lakh, whichever is higher.
• Third dose: Minimum of Rs. 2 lakhs, based on the Micro credit plan prepared by
the SHGs and appraised by the Federations /Support agency and the previous
credit History.
• Fourth dose onwards: Loan amount can be between Rs. 5-10 lakhs for fourth dose
and/or higher in subsequent doses. The loan amount will be based on the Micro
Credit Plans of the SHGs and their members.
The loans may be used for meeting social needs, high cost debt swapping and
taking up sustainable livelihoods by the individual members within the SHGs or
to finance any viable common activity started by the SHGs.
(Corpus is inclusive of revolving funds, if any, received by that SHG, its own
savings and funds from other sources in case of promotion by other
institutes/NGOs.)
7.3 Type of facility and repayment:
7.3.1SHGs can avail either Term loan or a CCL loan or both based on the need. In
case of need, additional loan can be sanctioned even though the previous loan is
outstanding.
7.3.2 Repayment schedule could be as follows:
The first dose of loan will be repaid in 6-12 instalments
Second dose of loan will be repaid in 12-24 months.
Third dose will be sanctioned based on the micro credit plans, the repayment has
to be either monthly/quarterly /half yearly based on the cash flow and it has to
be between 2 to 5 Years.
Fourth dose onwards: repayment has to be either monthly / quarterly / half
yearly based on the cash flow and it has to be between 3 to 6 Years.
7.4. Security and Margin: No collateral and no margin will be charged up to Rs.
10.00 lakhs limit to the SHGs. No lien should be marked against savings bank
account of SHGs and no deposits should be insisted upon while sanctioning loans.
7.5. Dealing with Defaulters:
7.5.1 It is desirable that wilful defaulters should not be financed under
DAY-NRLM. In case wilful defaulters are members of a group, they might be
allowed to benefit from the thrift and credit activities of the group including
the corpus built up with the assistance of Revolving Fund. But at the stage of
assistance for economic activities, the wilful defaulters should not have the
benefit of further assistance until the outstanding loans are repaid. Wilful
defaulters of the group should not get benefits under the DAY-NRLM Scheme and
the group may be financed excluding such defaulters while documenting the loan.
7.5.2 Further, non-wilful defaulters should not be debarred from receiving the
loan. In case default is due to genuine reasons, Banks may follow the norms
suggested for restructuring the account with revised repayment schedule.
8. Credit Target Planning
8.1 Based on the Potential Linked Plan/State Focus Paper prepared by NABARD,
SLBC sub-committee may arrive at the district-wise, block-wise and branch-wise
credit plan. The sub- committee has to consider the existing SHGs, New SHGs
proposed, and number of SHGs eligible for fresh and repeat loans as suggested by
the SRLMs to arrive at the credit targets for the states. The targets so decided
should be approved in the SLBC and should be reviewed and monitored periodically
for effective implementation.
8.2. The district-wise credit plans should be communicated to the DCC. The
Block-wise/Cluster-wise targets are to be communicated to the bank Branches
through the Controllers.
9. Post credit follow-up
9.1 Loan pass books in regional languages may be issued to the SHGs which may
contain all the details of the loans disbursed to them and the terms and
conditions applicable to the loan sanctioned. The passbook should be updated
with every transaction made by the SHGs. At the time of documentation and
disbursement of loan, it is advisable to clearly explain the terms and
conditions as part of financial literacy.
9.2 Bank branches may observe one fixed day in a fortnight to enable the staff
to go to the field and attend the meetings of the SHGs and Federations to
observe the operations of the SHGs and keep a track of the regularity in the
SHGs meetings and performance.
10. Repayment:
Prompt repayment of the loans is necessary to ensure the success of the
programme. Banks shall take all possible measures, i.e. personal contact,
organization of joint recovery camps with District Mission Management Units
(DPMUs) / DRDAs to ensure the recovery of loans. Keeping in view, the importance
of loan recovery, banks should prepare a list of defaulters under DAY-NRLM every
month and furnish the list in the BLBC, DLCC meetings. This would ensure that
DAY-NRLM staff at the district/ block level will assist the bankers in
initiating the repayment.
11. Deputation of the bank officials to SRLMs
As a measure of strengthening the (DPMUs) / DRDAs and for promoting a better
credit environment, deputation of the bank officials to DPMUs/ DRDAs has been
suggested. Banks may consider deputing officers at various levels to the State
Governments/DRDAs in consultation with them.
12. Supervision and monitoring of the Scheme
Banks may set up DAY-NRLM cells at Regional/Zonal offices. These cells should
periodically monitor and review the flow of credit to the SHGs, ensure the
implementation of the guidelines to the scheme, collect data from the branches
and make available consolidated data to the Head office and the DAY-NRLM units
at the districts/ blocks. The cell should also discuss this consolidated data in
the SLBC, BLBC and DCC meetings regularly to maintain the effective
communication with the state staff and all banks.
12.1 State Level Bankers’ Committee: SLBCs shall constitute a sub-committee on
SHG-bank linkage. The sub-committee should consist of members from all banks
operating in the State, RBI, NABARD, CEO of SRLM, representatives of State Rural
Development Department, Secretary-Institutional Finance and Representatives of
Development Departments etc. The sub- committee shall meet once in a month with
a specific agenda of review, implementation and monitoring of the SHG-Bank
linkage and the issues/ constraints in achievement of the credit target. The
decisions of SLBCs should be derived from the analysis of the reports of the
sub-committee.
12.2 District Coordination Committee: The DCC (DAY-NRLM sub-committee) shall
regularly monitor the flow of credit to SHGs at the district level and resolve
issues that constrain the flow of credit to the SHGs at district level. This
committee meeting should have participation of LDMs, AGM of NABARD, district
coordinators of the banks and DPMU staff representing DAY-NRLM and office
bearers of SHG federations.
12.3 Block level Bankers Committee: The BLBC shall meet regularly and take up
issues of SHG bank linkage at the block level. In this Committee, the SHGs/
Federations of the SHGs should be included as members to raise their voice in
the forum. Branch wise status of SHG credit shall be monitored at the BLBC
(Annex B and C may be used for the purpose)
12.4 Reporting to Lead District Managers: The branches may furnish the progress
report and the delinquency report achieved under various activities of DAY-NRLM
in the format at Annex ‘V’ and ‘Annex VI’ to the LDM every month for onward
submission to Special Steering Committee/sub-committee constituted by SLBC.
12.5 Reporting to RBI: Banks may give a state-wise consolidated report on the
progress made on DAY-NRLM to RBI/NABARD at quarterly intervals.
12.6 Reporting on SHG-Bank linkages: NABARD shall submit monthly report on the
SHG bank linkage, data for which shall flow from the CBS platform to DAY-NRLM on
regular basis.
12.7 LBR returns: Existing procedure of submitting LBR returns to be continued
duly furnishing the correct code.
13. Data Sharing:
Data sharing on a mutually agreed format / interval may be provided to SRLM for
initiating various strategies including recovery etc. The financing banks may
enter into a Memorandum of Understanding (MOU) for regular data sharing with the
State Rural Livelihood Missions, through the CBS platform.
14. DAY-NRLM support to the bankers:
14.1 SRLM would develop strategic partnerships with major banks at various
levels. It would invest in creating enabling conditions for both the banks and
the poor for a mutually rewarding relationship.
14.2 SRLM will assist the SHGs through imparting financial literacy, extending
counselling services on savings, credit and training on Micro-investment
Planning embedded in capacity building.
14.3 Improving quality of banking services to poor clients by positioning
customer relationship managers (Bank Mitra).
14.4 Leveraging IT mobile technologies and institutions of poor and youth as
business facilitators and business correspondents.
14.5. Community based recovery mechanism: One exclusive sub - committee for SHG
Bank Linkage may be formed at village/cluster/ block level which will provide
support to the banks in ensuring proper utilization of loan amount, recovery
etc. The bank linkage sub - committee members from each village level federation
along with project staff will meet once in a month under the chairmanship of the
Branch Manager in the branch premises with the agenda items relating to bank
linkage.
Annex I
Key Features of DAY-NRLM
1. Universal Social Mobilization: To begin with, DAY-NRLM would ensure that at
least one member from each identified rural poor household, preferably a woman,
is brought under the Self Help Group (SHG) network in a time bound manner.
Subsequently, both women and men would be organized for addressing livelihoods
issues i.e. farmers organizations, milk producers’ cooperatives, weavers
associations, etc. All these institutions are inclusive and no poor would be
left out of them. DAY-NRLM would ensure adequate coverage of vulnerable sections
of the society such that 50% of the beneficiaries are SC/STs, 15% are minorities
and 3% are persons with disability, while keeping in view the ultimate target of
100% coverage of BPL families.
2. Participatory Identification of poor (PIP): The experience from SGSY suggests
that the current BPL list has large inclusion and exclusion errors. To widen the
target groups beyond the BPL list and to include all the needy poor, DAY-NRLM
will undertake community based process i.e. participation of the poor in the
process of identifying the target group. Participatory process based on sound
methodology and tools (social mapping and well-being categorization, deprivation
indicators) and also locally understood and accepted criterion ensures local
consensus that inadvertently reduces the inclusion and exclusion errors, and
enables formation of the groups on the basis of mutual affinity. Over the years,
the participatory method of identifying the poor have been developed and applied
successfully in the states like AP, Kerala, Tamil Nadu and Odisha.
The households identified as poor through the P.I.P process will be accepted as
DAY-NRLM target group and will be eligible for all the benefits under the
programme. The list finalized after PIP process will be vetted by the Gram Sabha
and approved by the Gram Panchayat.
Till the PIP process is undertaken by the State in a particular district/Block,
the rural households already included in the official BPL list will be targeted
under DAY-NRLM. As already provided in the Framework for implementation of
DAY-NRLM, up to 30% of the total membership of the SHGs may be from among the
population marginally above the poverty line, subject to the approval of the BPL
members of the group. This 30% also includes the excluded poor, those who are
really as poor as those included in BPL list but their name does not figure in
the list.
3. Promotion of Institutions of the poor: Strong institutions of the poor such
as SHGs and their village level and higher level federations are necessary to
provide space, voice and resources for the poor and for reducing their
dependence on external agencies. They empower them and also act as instruments
of knowledge and technology dissemination, and hubs of production,
collectivization and commerce. DAY-NRLM, therefore, would focus on setting up
these institutions at various levels. In addition, DAY-NRLM would promote
specialized institutions like Livelihoods collectives, producers’
cooperative/companies for livelihoods promotion through deriving economies of
scale, backward and forward linkages, and access to information, credit,
technology, markets etc. The Livelihoods collectives would enable the poor to
optimize their limited resource.
4. Strengthening all existing SHGs and federations of the poor. There are
existing institutions of the poor women formed by Government efforts and efforts
of NGOs. DAY-NRLM would strengthen all existing institutions of the poor in a
partnership mode. The self-help promoting institutions both in the Government
and in the NGO sector would promote social accountability practices to introduce
greater transparency. This would be in addition to the mechanisms that would be
evolved by SRLMs and state governments. The learning from one another underpins
the key processes of learning in DAY-NRLM.
5. Emphasis on Training, Capacity building and skill building: DAY-NRLM would
ensure that the poor are provided with the requisite skills for managing their
institutions, linking up with markets, managing their existing livelihoods,
enhancing their credit absorption capacity and credit worthiness, etc. A
multi-pronged approach is envisaged for continuous capacity building of the
targeted families, SHGs, their federations, government functionaries, bankers,
NGOs and other key stakeholders. Particular focus would be on developing and
engaging community professionals and community resource persons for capacity
building of SHGs and their federations and other collectives. DAY-NRLM would
make extensive use of ICT to make knowledge dissemination and capacity building
more effective.
6. Revolving Fund and Community investment support Fund (C.I.F): A Revolving
Fund would be provided to eligible SHGs as an incentive to inculcate the habit
of thrift and accumulate their own funds towards meeting their credit needs in
the long-run and immediate consumption needs in the short-run. The C.I.F would
be a corpus and used for meeting the members’ credit needs directly and as
catalytic capital for leveraging repeat bank finance. The C.I.F would be routed
to the SHGs through the Federations. The key to coming out of poverty is
continuous and easy access to finance, at reasonable rates, till they accumulate
their own funds in large measure.
7. Universal Financial Inclusion: DAY-NRLM would work towards achieving
universal financial inclusion, beyond basic banking services to all the poor
households, SHGs and their federations. DAY-NRLM would work on both demand and
supply side of Financial Inclusion. On the demand side, it would promote
financial literacy among the poor and provides catalytic capital to the SHGs and
their federations. On the supply side, it would coordinate with the financial
sector and encourage use of Information, Communication & Technology (ICT) based
financial technologies, business correspondents and community facilitators like
‘Bank Mitras’. It would also work towards universal coverage of rural poor
against loss of life, health and assets. Further, it would work on remittances,
especially in areas where migration is endemic.
8. Provision of Interest Subvention: The rural poor need credit at low rate of
interest and in multiple doses to make their ventures economically viable. In
order to ensure affordable credit, DAY-NRLM has a provision for subvention on
interest rate above 7% per annum for all eligible SHGs, who have availed loans
from mainstream financial institutions.
9. Funding Pattern: DAY-NRLM is a Centrally Sponsored Scheme and the financing
of the programme would be shared between the Centre and the States in the ratio
of 75:25 (90:10 in case of North Eastern States including Sikkim; completely
from the Centre in case of UTs). The Central allocation earmarked for the States
would broadly be distributed in relation to the incidence of poverty in the
States.
10. Phased Implementation: Social capital of the poor consists of the
institutions of the poor, their leaders, community professionals and more
importantly community resource persons (poor women whose lives have been
transformed through the support of their institutions). Building up social
capital takes some time in the initial years, but it multiplies rapidly after
some time. If the social capital of the poor does not play the lead role in
DAY-NRLM, then it would not be a people’s programme. Further, it is important to
ensure that the quality and effectiveness of the interventions is not diluted.
Therefore, a phased implementation approach is adopted in DAY-NRLM. DAY-NRLM
would reach all districts by the end of 12th Five-year Plan.
11. Intensive blocks. The blocks that are taken up for implementation of
DAY-NRLM, ‘intensive blocks’, would have access to a full complement of trained
professional staff and cover a whole range of activities of universal and
intense social and financial inclusion, livelihoods, partnerships etc. However,
in the remaining blocks or non-intensive blocks, the activities may be limited
in scope and intensity.
12. Rural Self Employment Training Institutes (RSETIs). RSETI concept is built
on the model pioneered by Rural Development Self Employment Institute (RUDSETI)
– a collaborative partnership between SDME Trust, Syndicate Bank and Canara
Bank. The model envisages transforming unemployed youth into confident self-
employed entrepreneurs through a short duration experiential learning programme
followed by systematic long duration hand holding support. The need-based
training builds entrepreneurship qualities, improves self-confidence, reduces
risk of failure and develops the trainees into change agents. Banks are fully
involved in selection, training and post training follow up stages. The needs of
the poor articulated through the institutions of the poor would guide RSETIs in
preparing the participants/trainees in their pursuits of self-employment and
enterprises. DAY-NRLM would encourage public sector banks to set up RSETIs in
all districts of the country.
Annex II
Key difference from SGSY
1. DAY-NRLM is promoting a major shift from purely ‘allocation based’ strategy
to a ‘demand driven’ strategy wherein states have the flexibility to develop
their own plans for capacity building of women SHGs and Federations,
infrastructure and marketing, and policy for financial assistance for the SHGs.
2. DAY-NRLM will identify the target group of poor through a ‘participatory
identification of the poor’ process instead of using the BPL list as was done in
SGSY. This will ensure that the voiceless, poorest of poor are not ignored. In
fact under DAY-NRLM, the first preference is given to the poorest of poor
households.
3. DAY-NRLM will promote the formation of women SHGs on the basis of affinity
and not on the basis of a common activity, as it used to be under SGSY. It is
definitely possible that members who come together on the basis of affinity
could be having a common activity.
4. Unlike SGSY, the DAY-NRLM has taken a saturation approach and will ensure all
the poor in a village are covered and a woman from each poor family is motivated
to join the SHG.
5. SHG Federations: All SHGs in a village come together to form a federation at
the village level. The village federation is a very important support structure
for the members and their SHGs. The cluster federation is the next level of
federation. A cluster consists of a group of villages within a block. The exact
configuration will vary from State to State, but typically a cluster consists of
25 - 40 villages. The Village federations and the Cluster federations are the
two critical support structures for the SHGs and their members in their long
journey out of poverty.
6. DAY-NRLM will provide continuous hand-holding support to SHGs, and their
federations. This was missing in SGSY. Under DAY-NRLM this support will be
provided to a great extent by capacitating the SHG federations and by building a
cadre of community professionals from among the poor women. The federations and
the community professionals will be imparted the necessary skills by the
mission.
7. The objective of DAY-NRLM is to ensure that SHGs are enabled to access repeat
finance from Banks, till they attain sustainable livelihoods and decent living
standards. This was missing in SGSY, where the emphasis was on one time support.
Annex III
Interest subvention scheme for Women SHGs
I. Interest subvention scheme on Credit to Women SHG for all Commercial Banks
(only Public Sector Banks, Private Sector Banks and Regional Rural Banks) and
Co-operative banks in 150 districts
i. All women SHGs will be eligible for interest subvention on credit upto Rs. 3
lakhs at 7% per annum. SHG availing capital subsidy under SGSY in their existing
credit outstanding will not be eligible for benefit under this scheme.
ii. The Commercial Banks and Cooperative Banks will lend to all the women SHGs
at the rate of 7% in the 150 districts. Annex IV provides the names of the 150
districts.
iii. All Commercial Banks (excluding RRBs) will be subvented to the extent of
difference between the Weighted Average Interest Charged (WAIC as specified by
Department of Financial Services, Ministry of Finance.) and 7% subject to the
maximum limit of 5.5%. This subvention will be available to all the Banks on the
condition that they make SHG credit available at 7% p.a. in the 150 districts.
iv. RRBs and Cooperative Banks will be subvented to the extent of difference
between the maximum lending rates (as specified by NABARD) and 7% subject to the
maximum limit of 5.5%. This subvention will be available to all RRBs and
Cooperative Banks on the condition that they make SHG credit available at 7%
p.a. in the 150 districts. RRBs and Cooperative Banks will also get concessional
refinance from NABARD. Detailed guidelines for RRBs and Cooperative Banks will
be issued by NABARD.
v. Further, the SHGs will be provided with an additional 3% subvention on the
prompt repayment of loans. For the purpose of Interest Subvention of additional
3% on prompt repayment, an SHG account will be considered prompt payee if it
satisfies the following criterion.
For Cash Credit Limit:
i. Outstanding balance shall not have remained in excess of the limit /drawing
power continuously for more than 30 days.
ii. There should be regular credit and debits in the accounts. In any case there
shall be at least one customer induced credit during a month.
iii. Customer induced credit should be sufficient to cover the interest debited
during the month.
b. For the Term loans: A term loan account where all of the interest payments
and/or instalments of principal were paid within 30 days of the due date during
the tenure of the loan, would be considered as an account having prompt payment.
All prompt payee SHG accounts as on the end of the reporting quarter will be
eligible for the additional interest subvention of 3%. The banks should credit
the amount of 3% interest subvention to the eligible SHG loan accounts and
thereafter seek the reimbursement.
vi. The Interest Subvention scheme shall be implemented for all commercial banks
(excluding RRBs) through a Nodal Bank selected by the Ministry of Rural
Development.
vii. For the RRBs and Cooperative Banks the scheme will be operationalized by
NABARD similar to the short term crop loan scheme.
viii. All Commercial Banks (including the PSBs, Private Banks and RRBs) who are
operating on the Core Banking Solutions (CBS) can avail the interest subvention
under the scheme.
ix. In order to avail the Interest Subvention on credit extended to the SHGs
@7%, regular subvention, all commercial banks (excluding RRBs) are required to
upload the SHG loan account information on the Nodal Bank’s portal as per the
required technical specification. Banks must submit the claims for 3% additional
subvention on the same portal.
x. The claims submitted by bank should be accompanied by a Statutory Auditor’s
certificate (in original) certifying the claims for subvention as true and
correct.
xi. In order to avail the Interest Subvention on credit extended to the SHGs @
7%, all RRBs and Cooperative Banks are required to submit their claims to
respective NABARD - Regional Offices on a quarterly basis as at June, September,
December and March. The claims for the last quarter should be accompanied with a
Statutory Auditor’s certificate certifying the claims for the Financial Year as
true and correct. The claims of any Bank for the quarter ending March will be
settled by MoRD only on receipt of the Statutory Audited certificate for the
complete Financial Year by the Bank.
xii. RRBs and Cooperative Banks may submit their consolidated claims pertaining
to the 3% additional subvention on disbursements made during the entire year to
respective NABARD - Regional Offices latest by June every year, duly audited by
Statutory Auditors certifying the correctness.
xiii. Any remaining claim pertaining to the disbursements made during the year
and not included during the year, may be consolidated separately and marked as
an 'Additional Claim' and submitted to Nodal Bank (for all Commercial banks
except RRBs) and NABARD Regional Offices (for all RRBs and Cooperative Banks)
latest by June every year, duly audited by Statutory Auditors certifying the
correctness.
xiv. Any corrections in claims by PSBs and Pvt. Sector Banks shall be adjusted
from later claims based on auditor’s certificate. The corrections must be made
on the Nodal Bank’s portal accordingly.
xv. For process of submission of claims by RRBs and Cooperative Banks, detailed
guidelines will be issued by NABARD
II. Interest subvention scheme for Category II Districts (Other than 150
districts).
For category II districts, comprising of districts other than the above 150
districts, all women SHGs under DAY-NRLM will continue to be eligible for
interest subvention to avail the loan facility at an interest rate of 7%. The
funding for this subvention will be provided to the State Rural Livelihoods
Missions (S.R.L.Ms). The State-wise distribution of the provision under this
budget head would be determined each year. In the Category II districts, Banks
will charge the SHGs as per their respective lending norms and the difference
between the lending rates and 7% subjected to a maximum limit of 5.5% will be
subvented in the loan accounts of the SHGs by the SRLM. In pursuance of the
above, the salient features and the operational guidelines in respect of the
interest subvention for the category II districts, are as follows:
(A) Role of the Banks:
All banks who are operating on the Core Banking Solution (CBS) are required to
furnish the details of the Credit disbursement and Credit outstanding of the
SHGs across all districts in the desired format as suggested by the MoRD,
directly from the CBS platform, to the Ministry of Rural Development ( through
FTP ) and to the SRLMs. The information should be provided on a monthly basis to
facilitate the calculation and disbursement of the Interest Subvention amount to
SHGs.
B) Role of the State Governments:
i. All women SHGs, comprising of more than 70% BPL or rural poor members (rural
poor as per the Participatory Identification Process) are regarded as SHGs under
DAY-NRLM. Such SHGs, comprising of rural poor members from the intended DAY-NRLM
target group will be eligible for interest subvention on credit up to Rs. 3 lakhs
at the rate of 7% per annum on prompt repayment.
ii. This scheme will be implemented by the State Rural Livelihood Missions
(SRLMs). SRLMs will provide interest subvention to the eligible SHGs who have
accessed loan from Commercial and Cooperative Banks. The funding for this
subvention will be met out of the Central Allocation: State Contribution in the
ratio of 75:25.
iii. The SHGs will be subvented with the extent of difference between the
lending Rate of the banks and 7% subjected to a maximum limit of 5.5% by the
SRLMs, directly on a monthly / quarterly basis. An e-transfer of the subvention
amount will be made by the SRLM to the loan accounts of the SHGs who have repaid
promptly.
iv. Women SHGs who have availed capital subsidy under SGSY in their existing
loans, will not be eligible for benefit of Interest Subvention for their
subsisting loan under this scheme.
v. SRLMs should submit Quarterly Utilization Certificate indicating subvention
amounts transferred to the Loan accounts of the eligible SHGs
The States with state specific interest subvention schemes are advised to
harmonize their guidelines with the Central scheme.
Appendix
No. |
Circular No. |
Date |
Subject |
1. |
RPCD.GSSD.CO.NO.81/09.01.03/2012-13 |
27.06.2013 |
Priority Sector Lending –
Restructuring of SGSY as National Rural Livelihoods Mission(DAY-NRLM)-Aajeevika |
2. |
RPCD.GSSD.CO.BC.No.38/09.01.03/2013-14 |
20.09.2013 |
Credit Facility under
National Rural Livelihoods Mission(NRLM)- Aajeevika- Reporting to RBI |
3. |
RPCD.GSSD.CO.BC.No.57/09.01.03/2013-14 |
19.11.2013 |
Restructuring of SGSY as
National Rural Livelihoods Mission (NRLM)-Aajeevika-Interest Subvention Scheme |
4. |
FIDD.GSSD.CO.BC.NO.45/09.01.03/2014-15 |
09.12.2014 |
National Rural Livelihoods
Mission(NRLM)- Aajeevika- Interest Subvention Scheme |
5. |
FIDD.GSSD.CO.BC.NO.19/09.01.03/2015-16 |
21.01.2016 |
National Rural Livelihoods
Mission(NRLM)- Aajeevika- Interest Subvention Scheme 2015-16 |
6. |
FIDD.GSSD.CO.BC.NO.26/09.01.03/2015-16 |
09.06.2016 |
National Rural Livelihoods
Mission(NRLM)- Aajeevika- Interest Subvention Scheme 2015-16 -Modification |
|