TOPIC 9 OF 17

Credit, Formal & Informal Sectors, SHGs

🎓 Class 10 Social Science CBSE Theory Ch 3 — Money and Credit ⏱ ~15 min
🌐 Language: [gtranslate]

This MCQ module is based on: Credit, Formal & Informal Sectors, SHGs

[myaischool_lt_sst_assessment grade_level="class_10" subject="economics" difficulty="intermediate"]

Credit, Formal & Informal Sectors, and Self-Help Groups

NCERT Understanding Economic Development | Chapter 3: Money and Credit

Two Different Credit Situations

A large number of everyday transactions involve credit? in some form. Credit (or a loan) is an agreement in which the lender provides the borrower with money, goods, or services in return for a promise of future payment. However, the outcome of credit depends heavily on the circumstances of the borrower. Let us examine two contrasting situations.

💰
Situation 1: Salim — Positive Outcome
A shoe manufacturer receives a large order before the festival season. He borrows raw materials on credit from his leather supplier and obtains a cash advance from the trader. After delivering the order on time, he earns a good profit and repays all his loans. Credit helped him expand production and increase his earnings.
Situation 2: Swapna — Debt Trap
A small farmer borrows from a moneylender to meet cultivation expenses. Pests destroy her crop midway through the season. Despite spending on costly pesticides, the crop fails. She cannot repay the loan. The debt accumulates over the year, and even the next year's earnings are insufficient to cover the old debt. She is forced to sell part of her land.
Key Contrast
In Salim's case, credit played a vital and positive role — it helped him meet working capital needs, complete production on time, and increase his earnings. In Swapna's case, credit pushed her into a debt trap. Whether credit is beneficial or harmful depends on the risks involved and whether the borrower has support in case of loss.
Definition
Debt Trap: A situation in which a borrower is caught in a cycle of borrowing and repaying, where each new loan is taken to repay an older one, and the total debt keeps increasing. The borrower's condition worsens over time and recovery becomes extremely difficult.
LET'S WORK THESE OUT — Comparing Credit Situations
L4 Analyse

Fill in the comparison table and then discuss:

AspectSalimSwapna
Why did they need credit?To meet working capital for a large orderTo cover expenses for crop cultivation
What was the risk?Inability to complete order on timeCrop failure due to pests or weather
What was the outcome?Order completed, profit earned, loan repaidCrop failed, debt accumulated, land sold
  1. If Salim continues to receive orders from traders, what would his financial position look like after 6 years?
  2. What factors made Swapna's situation so risky? Consider the role of pesticides, the moneylender, and the climate.
Guidance
Q1: If Salim keeps getting regular orders and manages credit wisely, his business would grow steadily. He could save profits, invest in better equipment, hire more workers, and eventually reduce his dependence on borrowed capital.

Q2: Multiple factors made Swapna vulnerable: (a) expensive pesticides did not save the crop; (b) the moneylender charged high interest making repayment even harder; (c) farming is inherently dependent on weather and unpredictable natural factors. A single crop failure can push a small farmer into a debt trap.

What Are the Terms of Credit — Interest Rate, Collateral and Documentation

Every loan agreement specifies an interest rate that the borrower must pay to the lender along with repayment of the principal amount. In addition, lenders may demand collateral? (security) against loans.

Definition
Collateral: An asset that the borrower owns — such as land, a building, a vehicle, livestock, or bank deposits — and pledges as a guarantee to the lender until the loan is repaid. If the borrower fails to repay, the lender has the right to sell the collateral to recover the loan amount.

The interest rate, collateral and documentation requirements, and the mode of repayment together comprise what is called the terms of credit?. These terms can vary substantially from one credit arrangement to another, depending on the nature of the lender and the borrower.

Example: A Housing Loan

Consider Megha, who takes a loan of Rs 5 lakhs from a bank to purchase a house. The annual interest rate is 12 per cent, and the loan is to be repaid over 10 years in monthly instalments. Megha had to submit employment records and salary documents. The bank kept the papers of the new house as collateral, to be returned only after the entire loan with interest is repaid.

LET'S WORK THESE OUT — Terms of Credit
L3 Apply
  1. Why do lenders ask for collateral while lending?
  2. Given that a large number of people in our country are poor, does it in any way affect their capacity to borrow?
  3. Fill in the blanks: While taking a loan, borrowers look for easy terms of credit. This means low interest rate, easy conditions for repayment, less collateral and documentation requirements.
Guidance
Q1: Lenders ask for collateral to reduce the risk of non-repayment. If a borrower defaults, the lender can sell the collateral to recover the loan amount. It serves as a safety net for the lender.

Q2: Yes, poverty significantly limits borrowing capacity. Poor people often lack assets that can be used as collateral. Without collateral, banks are reluctant to lend to them, pushing them towards informal lenders who charge much higher interest rates.

Variety of Credit Arrangements — A Village Example

Credit arrangements vary enormously depending on who provides the loan and who borrows it. Consider the village of Sonpur, where different residents access credit from very different sources and on very different terms.

BorrowerSourceInterest RateRepayment TermsCondition
Shyamal (small farmer, 1.5 acres) Agricultural trader 3% per month (36% p.a.) After harvest Must sell crop to the trader at a low price
Arun (medium farmer, 7 acres) Bank 8.5% per annum Within 3 years Can store crop and apply for fresh loan against cold storage receipt
Rama (agricultural labourer) Landowner-employer 5% per month (60% p.a.) Through labour Trapped in debt cycle; owes Rs 5,000

Notice the stark differences: Arun, who has land as collateral, gets a bank loan at 8.5% per year. Shyamal, a small farmer, borrows from a trader at 36% per year and must sell his crop at a low price. Rama, a landless labourer, borrows at 60% per year and repays through her labour, caught in a worsening debt cycle.

Cooperatives as a Source of Credit

Besides banks, cooperative societies are another major source of affordable credit in rural areas. Members of a cooperative pool their resources for mutual benefit. For example, Krishak Cooperative, near Sonpur, has 2,300 farmer members. It accepts deposits from members, uses these as collateral to obtain bank loans, and then provides credit to members for agricultural inputs, housing, fishery, and other needs.

How Does Formal Sector Credit Work — Banks and RBI Supervision

The various types of loans can be grouped into two broad categories: formal sector? loans and informal sector? loans.

🏢
Formal Sector
Includes banks and cooperatives. Supervised by the Reserve Bank of India (RBI). Must follow rules regarding interest rates, lending to priority sectors, and maintaining cash reserves.
👤
Informal Sector
Includes moneylenders, traders, employers, relatives, and friends. No supervision or regulation. Can charge any interest rate and may use unfair means for recovery.

The Reserve Bank of India supervises the functioning of formal sources of loans. It monitors whether banks maintain adequate cash reserves, ensures that lending is directed not just to profitable businesses but also to small cultivators, small-scale industries, and small borrowers. Banks must periodically report to the RBI on their lending activities, interest rates, and categories of borrowers.

No such oversight exists for the informal sector. Informal lenders can charge whatever interest they wish and there is no mechanism to prevent them from using coercive methods to collect repayment.

Sources of Credit in Rural India (2019)

L4 Analyse

Why Formal Credit Must Expand

Higher costs of borrowing from informal lenders mean a larger share of the borrower's earnings goes toward repaying loans. This leaves less income for the borrower's own needs. In extreme cases, the repayment amount can exceed the borrower's income, pushing them deeper into debt.

Data shows that 54 per cent of loans taken by poor urban households come from informal sources, while rich households source 83 per cent of their loans from formal channels. This pattern is similar in rural areas. The richer households enjoy cheap credit from banks, whereas the poor are forced to pay much more through informal lenders.

Urban Households: Formal vs Informal Credit by Wealth

L4 Analyse
Key Conclusion
It is necessary that banks and cooperatives increase their lending, particularly in rural areas, so that dependence on expensive informal credit reduces. Also, formal credit must be distributed more equally so that poor households can also benefit from affordable loans. Both steps are crucial for the country's development.
LET'S WORK THESE OUT — Formal vs Informal Credit
L5 Evaluate
  1. What are the differences between formal and informal sources of credit?
  2. Why should credit at reasonable rates be available for all?
  3. Should there be a supervisor like the RBI for informal lenders? Why would its task be difficult?
  4. Why is the share of formal sector credit higher for richer households compared to poorer ones?
Guidance
Q1: Formal sources (banks, cooperatives) are supervised by the RBI, charge lower interest, and maintain proper records. Informal sources (moneylenders, traders) are unregulated, charge much higher interest, and may use exploitative recovery methods.

Q2: Affordable credit allows people to start businesses, invest in farming, and improve their livelihoods. Without it, the poor remain trapped in high-interest informal borrowing that keeps them in poverty.

Q3: A supervisor for informal lenders would be beneficial in theory but extremely difficult in practice because informal lenders are numerous, geographically dispersed, operate without written records, and would resist regulation.

Q4: Richer households have assets to offer as collateral and proper documentation, making banks willing to lend to them. The poor lack collateral and documentation, so they are excluded from formal banking and must rely on informal sources.

How Do Self-Help Groups (SHGs) Provide Credit to the Poor?

Poor households remain dependent on informal credit for several reasons: banks are not present in all rural areas; bank loans require proper documents and collateral that the poor often lack; and the process of obtaining a bank loan is far more complicated than approaching a local moneylender.

To address this gap, people have developed an innovative approach: Self-Help Groups (SHGs)?. The idea is to organise the rural poor, particularly women, into small groups of 15–20 members from the same neighbourhood. Members meet regularly and save small amounts — ranging from Rs 25 to Rs 100 or more per person.

How SHGs Work

  1. Pooling savings: Members contribute regular savings to a common fund.
  2. Internal lending: Members can take small loans from the group's pooled savings at reasonable interest — lower than moneylender rates.
  3. Bank eligibility: After one to two years of regular saving, the group becomes eligible for bank loans.
  4. Group accountability: The loan is sanctioned in the group's name. All members share responsibility for repayment, ensuring discipline.
  5. Self-employment: Loans are used to create income-generating activities — buying seeds, raw materials, sewing machines, handlooms, cattle, or housing materials.
Key Benefits of SHGs
SHGs help borrowers overcome the problem of lack of collateral. They enable timely loans for various needs at reasonable interest rates. Beyond finance, SHG meetings provide a platform for women to discuss social issues like health, nutrition, and domestic violence — making women financially self-reliant and socially empowered.

Grameen Bank of Bangladesh

Notable Quote
If credit can be made available to the poor on appropriate and reasonable terms, these millions of small people with their millions of small pursuits can add up to create the biggest development wonder.
— Professor Muhammad Yunus, Founder of Grameen Bank, Nobel Peace Prize 2006

The Grameen Bank of Bangladesh is one of the most successful examples of reaching the poor to meet their credit needs at reasonable rates. Founded in the 1970s as a small project, by 2018 it had over 9 million members across approximately 81,600 villages in Bangladesh. Nearly all borrowers are women from the poorest sections of society, and they have demonstrated that poor women are not only reliable borrowers but can also successfully run small income-generating enterprises.

📋

Competency-Based Questions

Case Study: In village Rampur, Kamla is a landless agricultural worker who earns Rs 200 per day during the planting season. She needs Rs 15,000 for her daughter's medical treatment. She approaches a local moneylender who charges 5% interest per month and requires no collateral. Meanwhile, a Self-Help Group in the neighbouring village offers loans at 2% per month to its members after one year of regular savings. Kamla is not a member of any SHG.
Q1. Why is Kamla unable to approach a bank for this loan?
L3 Apply
  • (A) Banks do not exist in rural India
  • (B) Banks require collateral and documentation, which a landless labourer like Kamla lacks
  • (C) Banks only lend to people earning more than Rs 1 lakh per month
  • (D) The government has banned rural bank lending
Q2. Analyse the total repayment burden on Kamla if she borrows Rs 15,000 from the moneylender at 5% per month and repays after 6 months.
L4 Analyse
Q3. Evaluate how joining a Self-Help Group could have improved Kamla's situation, both financially and socially.
L5 Evaluate
HOT Q. Propose a realistic plan for how Kamla's village could establish its own Self-Help Group, outlining the steps from formation to obtaining a bank loan.
L6 Create
⚖ Assertion–Reason Questions
Assertion (A): Informal lenders generally charge much higher interest rates than banks.
Reason (R): There is no regulatory body supervising the credit activities of informal lenders in India.
(A) Both A and R are true, and R correctly explains A
(B) Both A and R are true, but R does not correctly explain A
(C) A is true but R is false
(D) A is false but R is true
Assertion (A): Self-Help Groups (SHGs) help poor women get loans without collateral.
Reason (R): In SHGs, the group itself takes collective responsibility for loan repayment, which reassures banks about lending to the poor.
(A) Both A and R are true, and R correctly explains A
(B) Both A and R are true, but R does not correctly explain A
(C) A is true but R is false
(D) A is false but R is true
Assertion (A): Rich households in India rely primarily on informal sources of credit.
Reason (R): Formal sector credit from banks is not available in urban areas.
(A) Both A and R are true, and R correctly explains A
(B) Both A and R are true, but R does not correctly explain A
(C) A is true but R is false
(D) A is false and R is false

Reference: NCERT Official Textbook — Economics Class 10 | CBSE Curriculum 2025

Frequently Asked Questions — Credit Formal and Informal Sectors

What are the terms of credit in Class 10 Economics?

Terms of credit refer to conditions under which a loan is given, including interest rate, collateral requirement, documentation, and mode of repayment. Collateral is an asset pledged as security against the loan. If the borrower fails to repay, the lender can sell the collateral. Higher interest rates and stricter collateral requirements make credit more expensive and harder to access for the poor.

What is collateral and why is it important?

Collateral is an asset such as land, building, vehicle, or gold that a borrower pledges to a lender as guarantee for a loan. If the borrower fails to repay, the lender can sell it to recover the amount. Collateral reduces risk for the lender but creates a barrier for poor people who do not own valuable assets and therefore cannot access formal bank loans.

What are Self-Help Groups and how do they work?

Self-Help Groups (SHGs) are small groups of 15-20 members, mostly women, who pool savings and lend to each other at reasonable rates. After regular saving for a year or two, the group becomes eligible for bank loans. The SHG model provides collateral-free loans to the poor, builds financial discipline, empowers women, and creates a platform for discussing social issues.

Why do poor people depend on informal credit?

Poor people depend on informal credit because they lack collateral, documentation, and credit history required by banks. Informal lenders like moneylenders provide quick loans without such requirements but charge very high interest rates, sometimes 36 to 60 percent or more. This traps borrowers in a cycle of debt, making it very hard to escape poverty.

What role does the RBI play in formal sector credit?

The Reserve Bank of India (RBI) supervises formal sector lenders like commercial and cooperative banks. It ensures banks maintain minimum cash balance, lend to all sectors including agriculture, report lending activities, and charge fair interest rates. The RBI does not supervise informal lenders, which is why moneylenders can charge exploitative rates without accountability.

AI Tutor
Social Science Class 10 — Understanding Economic Development (Economics)
Ready
Hi! 👋 I'm Gaura, your AI Tutor for Credit, Formal & Informal Sectors, SHGs. Take your time studying the lesson — whenever you have a doubt, just ask me! I'm here to help.