Priority sector lending


Priority Sector Lending is an important role given by the to the banks for providing a specified portion of the bank lending to few specific sectors like agriculture and allied activities, micro and small enterprises, poor people for housing, students for education and other low income groups and weaker sections.. This is essentially meant for an all round development of the economy as opposed to focusing only on the financial sector.

Categories of Priority Sector

The broad categories of priority sector for all scheduled commercial banks are as under:
Agriculture and Allied Activities : Direct finance to agriculture shall include short,
medium and long term loans given for agriculture and allied activities directly to individual
farmers, Self-Help Groups or Joint Liability Groups of individual farmers
without limit and to others up to Rs.
20 lakh, for taking up agriculture/allied activities.
Indirect finance to agriculture shall include loans given for agriculture and allied activities as
specified in Section I, appended.
This distinction between direct and indirect agriculture is dispensed with. Instead, the lending to agriculture sector has been re-defined to include Farm Credit Agriculture Infrastructure and Ancillary Activities,
Small Scale Industries : Direct finance to small scale
industries shall include all loans given to SSI units which are engaged in
manufacture, processing or preservation of goods and whose investment in plant and
machinery excluding land and building does not exceed the amounts
specified in Section I, appended.
Indirect finance to SSI shall include finance to any person providing inputs to or marketing
the output of artisans, village and cottage industries, hand-looms and to cooperatives of
producers in this sector.
Small Business / Service Enterprises: shall include small business, retail trade,
professional & self-employed persons, small road & water transport operators and other
service enterprises as per the definition given in Section I and other enterprises that are
engaged in providing or rendering of services, and whose investment in equipment does
not exceed the amount specified in Section I, appended.
Micro Credit : Provision of credit and other financial services and products of very small
amounts not exceeding Rs. 50,000 per borrower to the poor in rural, semi-urban and urban
areas, either directly or through a group mechanism, for enabling them to improve their
living standards, will constitute micro credit.
Education loans: Education loans include loans and advances granted to only individuals
for educational purposes up to Rs. 10 lakh for studies in India and Rs. 20 lakh for studies
abroad, and do not include those granted to institutions;
Housing loans: Loans up to Rs. 35 lakh in metropolitan cities where population is above 10 lakh and Rs. 25 Lakh at other center s for construction/purchase of a dwelling unit per family provided total cost of the unit in metropolitan centres and at other centres does not exceed Rs. 45 Lacs and Rs. 30 Lacs respectively.
and loans given for repairs to
the damaged houses of individuals up to Rs.5 lakh in metropolitan centres and Rs. 2 Lakh at other centres.
Investments by banks in securitised assets, representing loans to agriculture,
small scale industries and housing, shall be eligible for classification under respective
categories of priority sector depending on the underlying assets, provided the
securitised assets are originated by banks and financial institutions and fulfill the Reserve Bank of India
guidelines on securitisation.
Under Weaker Sections :
Priority sector loans to the following borrowers are considered under Weaker Sections category:-
Small and marginal farmers;
Artisans, village and cottage industries where individual credit limits do not exceed Rs 1 Lakh ;
Beneficiaries of Swarnajayanti Gram Swarozgar Yojana, now National Rural Livelihood Mission ;
Scheduled Castes and Scheduled Tribes;
Beneficiaries of Differential Rate of Interest scheme;
Beneficiaries under Swarna Jayanti Shahari Rozgar Yojana ;
Beneficiaries under the Scheme for Rehabilitation of Manual Scavengers ;
Loans to Self Help Groups;
Loans to distressed farmers indebted to non-institutional lenders;
Loans to distressed persons other than farmers not exceeding Rs 1 Lakh per borrower to prepay their debt to non-institutional lenders;
Loans to individual women beneficiaries up to Rs 1 Lakh per borrower.
also called or known as priority sector advancement ;
Account holders under Pradhan Mantri Jan Dhan Yojana
Renewable energy sector has also been added to priority sector lending in the year 2015.