It is the second-largest market for tomatoes in Asia (after Pimpalgaon, Nashik) and the largest in South India. Yet, the APMC market in Kolar, 70 km from Bengaluru, does not even have a bank branch or an ATM.
This has put hundreds of farmers,
traders, commission agents, porters, transport agents and even truck
drivers (who ferry the produce in and out) into severe hardship,
especially after the demonetisation of ₹500 and ₹1,000 notes. Across the
country, transactions in APMCs such as Kolar were, hitherto, largely in
cash.
“The nearest ATM/bank branch is 1.5-2 km
away. My workers are spending more time at long queues in banks to
withdraw money. We immediately need a bank here. Also, there’s a need
for an awareness drive among farmers on using bank facilities,” a trader
said.
Further, farmers are still insisting on cash payments
and not accepting cheques. This has led to an increase in part-payments
and deferred payments, with most traders still making payments with the
old ₹500 currency. “I will now have to deposit the old currency. As a
result, payments to my workers may get delayed by a day or two,” said
Muniyappa from Paduvanahalli village, who got a mere ₹4 a kg for his
produce of 1,050 kg.
A branch of Kolar DCC Bank that
operated in the APMC premises has not been functioning for the past 8-10
months for unknown reasons, officials said. “Considering the hardships
faced by market participants, we have started the process of getting a
nationalised bank to set up an ATM and a branch here,” said Ravi Kumar,
Secretary, APMC, Kolar.
Kolar handles around 1.5 lakh tonnes of tomatoes
annually. Arrivals in the past few weeks are up due to conducive
weather, while prices are down. “We have demand but are hesitant to book
orders. We are booking only if the buyer makes payments through a bank
transfer,” said a trader.
Tomatoes from the Kolar APMC market are transported to
Bihar, Bengal, Odisha, Jharkhand, Punjab, Madhya Pradesh, Uttar Pradesh,
Delhi, Andhra Pradesh and Tamil Nadu. They are also exported to
Pakistan, Bangladesh and sometimes airlifted to Dubai.
Besides
creating adequate banking facilities, the government should look at
having banking correspondents at the village level so that cash can be
made available to farmers at their doorsteps, says Professor Gopal Naik
of IIM Bangalore.
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