Impact of agricultural credit finance on food production in Nepal
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Department of Economics
Abstract
The institutional credit has always been perceived as a critical factor for agricultural
development in Nepal through complementing working capital, easing liquidity and
investment constraints. The present study has examined the trends and variations in
institutional credit flow to agriculture in Nepal for the period 2005 to 2020 using
compound annual growth rate. Further, impact of agricultural credit on food production
was also assessed using time series data. The study is based on the secondary data
collected from various published sources. Results indicated that institutional credit to
agriculture in real terms has registered a significant positive growth during the past one
and half decade and the highest annual growth was observed during 2007 and the overall
compounding annual growth rate of sixteen year is 29.99 percent. The study further
analyses the short run and long run impact of agricultural credit on food production in
Nepal. This study used annual data covering the period 2005–2020. The autoregressive
distributed lag (ARDL) approach is applied to explore the cointegration between
underlying variables. The findings of the ARDL Long-Run Bounds Test suggest that
there is long term relationship among food production, agricultural credit and cultivation
land area. The empirical results reveal that food production, agricultural credit, and
cultivating land area have a positive and significant impact on agricultural production in
both the short-run and long-run. Therefore, the study has suggested for better access to
agricultural credit to farmers for enhancing food production.It is desirable for both the
government and the NRB to consider amendment current policies, investing more in
actual farmers and enhance credit flow to the agriculture sector to ensure that they have
access to the agricultural needs and facilities to drive agricultural transformation.
Keywords: food production; agricultural credit; CAGR; ARDL approach; Nepal