Maharashtra Budget announces loan waiver of ₹2 lakh to farmers


Maharashtra Budget 2026-27: Farm Loan Waiver of ₹2 Lakh — UPSC Study Note


1. At a Glance


2. Why in the News


3. Background & Evolution

Year Scheme Key Features
2008 Central Agricultural Debt Waiver & Debt Relief Scheme (UPA) ₹71,000 crore national waiver; ≤2 ha marginal farmers
2017 Chhatrapati Shivaji Maharaj Shetkari Sanman Yojana ₹16,669.75 crore credited to 40.21 lakh farmers by Nov 2018 [S5]
2019 Mahatma Jyotirao Phule Shetkari Karjmukti Yojana Loans ≤₹2 lakh disbursed Apr 2015–Mar 2019; overdue as of 30 Sep 2019 [S5]
2026 Punyashlok Ahilyadevi Holkar Shetkari Karjmafi Yojana (PAHSKY) Loans ≤₹2 lakh overdue as of 30 Sep 2025; no land-size cap [S2][S4]

4. Core Static Facts

Scheme Specifics — PAHSKY 2026: - Full name: Punyashlok Ahilyadevi Holkar Shetkari Karjmafi Yojana - Announced by: CM Devendra Fadnavis (Mahayuti government — BJP + NCP(Ajit) + Shiv Sena(Shinde)) - Date of Budget: 7 March 2026 [S1] - Cabinet approval: 2 June 2026 [S4] - Waiver ceiling: ₹2 lakh per farmer [S1][S2] - Eligibility cutoff: Crop loans overdue as of 30 September 2025 [S1][S2] - Land-size restriction: None (unlike 2019 scheme) [S2] - Beneficiaries: ~28–30 lakh farmers (Budget speech); 55.72 lakh (Cabinet approval figure) [S1][S4] - Incentive for regular repayers: ₹50,000 under the same scheme [S1] - PAHSKY 2019 defaulters: Eligible for relief up to ₹50,000 on subsequent fresh crop loans [S4] - Total fiscal outlay: ~₹35,000 crore (Budget estimate); ₹36,585 crore (Cabinet approved) [S2][S4] - Implementing agency: Department of Co-operation, Maharashtra (district-level cooperative banks) [S5]

Budget 2026-27 Macro Numbers: - Total outlay: ₹7.69 lakh crore [S1] - Revenue receipts: ₹6.56 lakh crore [S1] - Revenue deficit: ₹40,500 crore [S1] - GSDP: ₹54.13 lakh crore; Budget = 14.21% of GSDP [S1] - Women & Child Development allocation: ₹24,231.28 crore (down from ~₹31,000 crore in 2025-26) [S1] - Agricultural economy target: $55 billion → $500 billion by 2047 (9× growth) [S1]


5. Multi-Dimensional Analysis

Economic

Social

Legal / Constitutional

Ethical / Governance

Administrative

Historical


6. Recent Developments (last 12–18 months)


7. Prelims Hooks

  1. PAHSKY stands for Punyashlok Ahilyadevi Holkar Shetkari Karjmafi Yojana — announced in Maharashtra Budget 2026-27. [S1]
  2. The scheme waives crop loans up to ₹2 lakh per farmer; cut-off date for overdue loans is 30 September 2025. [S1][S2]
  3. ₹36,585 crore is the Cabinet-approved total outlay; expected to benefit 55.72 lakh farmers. [S4]
  4. Farmers who regularly repaid loan instalments receive ₹50,000 (not a waiver, but an incentive/bonus). [S1]
  5. Maharashtra Budget 2026-27 total outlay: ₹7.69 lakh crore = 14.21% of GSDP. [S1]
  6. State GSDP for 2026-27 estimated at ₹54.13 lakh crore; revenue deficit ₹40,500 crore. [S1]
  7. Maharashtra's previous crop loan waiver was the Mahatma Jyotirao Phule Shetkari Karjmukti Yojana launched in December 2019. [S5]
  8. The 2017 Maharashtra waiver — Chhatrapati Shivaji Maharaj Shetkari Sanman Yojana — disbursed ₹16,669.75 crore to 40.21 lakh farmers by November 2018. [S5]
  9. Unlike the 2019 scheme, PAHSKY 2026 imposes no land-size restriction on eligibility. [S2]
  10. Agriculture and cooperative societies are State List subjects under Schedule VII of the Constitution — States have exclusive legislative competence on farm loan waivers.
  11. Maharashtra targets 9× agricultural GDP growth — from $55 billion to $500 billion by 2047 — announced in the same 2026-27 Budget. [S1]
  12. The Budget reduced Women & Child Development allocation to ₹24,231.28 crore from ~₹31,000 crore in 2025-26. [S1]
  13. Maharashtra is the 3rd State (after Tamil Nadu and Telangana) to announce a farm loan waiver in the 2025-26 political cycle. [S4]
  14. The scheme is named after Ahilyadevi Holkar (1725–1795), the Holkar dynasty ruler of Malwa, known for administrative and welfare works. [S1]

8. Mains Relevance

GS Papers: Primarily GS-III (Indian Economy, Agriculture); secondary relevance to GS-II (Government Schemes, Fiscal Federalism).

Syllabus headings: - GS-III: Issues related to direct and indirect farm subsidies and minimum support prices; Indian economy — mobilisation of resources; inclusive growth and issues arising from it - GS-II: Government policies and interventions for development in various sectors; welfare schemes for vulnerable sections

Plausible Mains Question Stems: 1. "Farm loan waivers are a symptomatic fix that aggravates the underlying disease of Indian agriculture." Critically examine with reference to recent State-level waivers. (GS-III, 15 marks) 2. Analyse the fiscal implications of farm loan waivers on State finances. How can States balance agrarian distress relief with fiscal consolidation? (GS-III, 10 marks) 3. Discuss the constitutional provisions governing agricultural policy in India. How has the cooperative federalism framework influenced farm debt relief programmes? (GS-II, 15 marks)


9. Related Topics to Study Next

Topic Why Connected
Agricultural Credit & Kisan Credit Card (KCC) Scheme Loan waivers operate on the same credit architecture (PACS → DCCB → NABARD)
NABARD & Cooperative Banking Structure Implementation channel for all farm loan waivers; regulatory oversight
Fiscal Responsibility & Budget Management (FRBM) Act Waivers push States toward revenue deficit; FRBM limits constrain off-budget borrowing
PM-KISAN & Direct Benefit Transfer in Agriculture Alternative income-support model vs. the waiver model — key policy debate
Agrarian Distress & Farmer Suicide Data (NCRB) Empirical context for why waivers recur; NCRB data on Maharashtra is frequently tested
Minimum Support Price (MSP) Mechanism & CACP Structural income solution vs. ex-post waiver — understanding MSP-waiver policy trade-off
Maharashtra Land Revenue Code & 7/12 Extract Administrative basis for farmer eligibility verification
Election Commission of India Model Code of Conduct Post-election waivers test the boundary between governance and electoral politics

10. Common Errors / Trap Areas

  1. Beneficiary count confusion: Budget speech cited 28-30 lakh; Cabinet approval (June 2026) says 55.72 lakh — exams may use either figure; note the different stages. [S1][S4]
  2. Scheme name mix-up: Three consecutive Maharashtra waivers have similar-sounding names (Chhatrapati Shivaji → Mahatma Jyotirao Phule → Ahilyadevi Holkar); aspirants confuse the year, the scheme name, and the outlay.
  3. ₹50,000 is NOT a waiver for bad loans — it is an incentive/reward for farmers who repaid on time; conflating it with the ₹2 lakh waiver is a frequent MCQ trap. [S1]
  4. Central vs. State authority: Farm loan waivers are entirely a State government function (State List subject); the Centre is NOT the implementing authority; confusing this with PM-KISAN (Central scheme) is common.
  5. 2019 scheme beneficiary overlap: Farmers who already benefited from the 2019 Mahatma Jyotirao Phule Yojana but subsequently defaulted are eligible only for the ₹50,000 relief, not the full ₹2 lakh waiver — a nuance that has MCQ potential. [S4]

11. Sources