Mastercard partners with LEAF to expand financial inclusion and increase the incomes of more than 1 million farmers
After a rigorous two-year pilot in Andhra Pradesh, this partnership aims to drive financial inclusion in the farmer community across South India and contribute to doubling of their incomes
·
Soft
launched in early 2021, LFN is now serving more than 110,000 farmers and 180 Farmer
Producer Organizations (FPOs)
India October 2021: To improve financial access and inclusion for more than one million of
farmers in India, Mastercard today announced a partnership with Lawrencedale
Agro Processing India (LEAF), India’s premier
agriculture value chain enabler, to launch LEAF Farmer Network (LFN). This
platform will
transform the lives of Indian farmers by leveraging technology aided by human
intervention, to solve multiple challenges of transparency in India’s rural
ecosystem.
LFN
will empower farmers across Andhra Pradesh, Karnataka, and Tamil Nadu with digitization
of harvest data,
enhance access to markets, provide expertise on better crops, and importantly,
bring in a high level of transparency by connecting directly with buyers. This
will not only build resilience among the farmer community, but also support the
Government’s vision of an ‘Atmanirbhar Bharat’.
Smallholder farmers, who account for more than 80% of India’s
agrarian economy, are often at the mercy of severe opacity and are perpetually
dependent on middlemen. Be it in sourcing quality farming products, realizing
optimum value for their harvest or using formal credit channels for payments,
farmers are facing challenges at every step.
“The agrarian ecosystem players are hampered by lack of
transparent access with actionable information. Digitization solves this challenge by integrating a
virtuous loop between farmers and markets, giving better access to information.
We are delighted to partner with Mastercard to take forward our years of
work in bringing about a positive change in the livelihood of marginalized
farmers,” said Palat Vijayaraghavan, Founder & CEO, LEAF.
LFN will seamlessly bring in access to good
quality produce at scale, enable price negotiation with complete transparency
and manage end-to-end logistics with quality control. The entire process is
managed by farmers, with support from LFN agents.
“The core of LFN is digitizing the produce buying process. It is a
high-touch model through a dedicated on-ground farmer advisory and change
management team. It is enabled by a rural relevant, secure phone driven and
internet agnostic technology provided by Mastercard,” explained LEAF’s Vijayaraghavan.
LFN
will digitize marketplaces, payments, workflows, and
farmer transaction histories by connecting buyers, farming inputs, suppliers,
agtechs, and banks with FPOs/farmers, helping to create a commercially
sustainable ecosystem comprising all relevant agriculture value chain players
with equitable commercial exchange mechanisms. This
initiative will also support the farmers through comprehensive training and
capacity building in entire lifecycle of the harvest, including post-harvest
management to reduce wastage.
"Mastercard has long been
committed to connecting individuals and small businesses to the digital economy,
ultimately supporting them to reach their full potential. We do this by
applying the full breadth of the company’s resources – people, data insights,
technology and philanthropy – to create solutions for sustainable, inclusive
growth. The LEAF Farmer Network is another step in this direction. It will
leverage the power of digital technologies to bring together key stakeholders
across the agri value chain to ensure that farmers get direct access to the
knowledge, skills and markets that they currently lack. Together with LEAF,
Mastercard is delighted that this initiative will have a tangible positive
impact on farmers’ earnings, supporting the Government of India’s goal of
doubling farmers’ income in the coming two years,"
said Nikhil Sahni, Division President, South Asia, Mastercard.
Banks are struggling to serve the
rural ecosystem effectively as incomes are largely paid in cash, which leads to
the economy being largely cash-based, low account balances and high servicing costs
for banks. Additionally, most farmers do not have a formal credit history, and it
is difficult for them to access any formal financial services. Enabling digital
payments for farmers through LFN will drive active account usage for farmers.
With this platform, farmers will get paid through their bank accounts or cards
designed for offline rural usage, providing liquidity of the digital money,
instead of going to their bank branches or business agents in nearby towns.
This will eventually enable farmers to
save more money and entice them away from unofficial money lenders. Financial
inclusion also serves as positive reinforcement for farmers to use formal
channels for payments, which builds their credit profile and makes them
eligible for loans from financial institutions.
Ricardo Pareja,
SVP, Sales and Market Development, H&D, Mastercard said,
“Across the globe, Mastercard’s commitment to financial inclusion and inclusive
growth has never been stronger. In India, we have made significant strides
towards this goal since the farmer network was piloted two years ago, and today
we are thrilled to see 110,000 farmers and 180 FPOs being benefitted. Through
this partnership with LEAF, we are confident that we’ll be able to further ease
the complexity and challenges faced by small and marginal farmers. Mastercard’s
vision is to support 10 million farmers by enabling them to adopt digital
technologies and helping them be part of the formal economy. The partnership
will provide 360-degree intervention and improve transparency in agricultural
trade while ensuring that the value is retained within the ecosystem.”
The
launch of LFN is an extension of Mastercard Farm Pass, a pilot program that was
introduced in 2018 in Andhra Pradesh. Farm Pass is a
pivotal component of Community Pass, a shared, interoperable digital infrastructure
for the rural population that facilitates access to critical services and minimizes
costs. Today Farm Pass supports 600,000 farmers
across India and East Africa, helping to raise incomes by 25-50 percent for
many farmers.
Comments
Post a Comment