Friday, December 5, 2025

 

Amit Shah And The NAFCUB COOPKUMBH 2025 Seeks to Bring Cooperative Banking to Every Small Town And Hinterland Village

Home Minister Amit Shah who is also the Union Cooperation Minister  inaugurated the NAFCUB-COOPKUMBH 2025 in New Delhi on 11th November. NAFCUB is the acronym for the National Federation of Urban cooperative Banks and Credit Societies. Amit Shah has held the Union Cooperation portfolio ever since it was formed in 2021, and retained it when the NDA government embarked on a new term in 2024. This is a testament to his imagination and dynamism that has greatly helped to boost this sector.

The conference, inaugurated in New Delhi, was an international pitch on the future of India’s urban cooperative banking sector. The international cooperative movement likes to learn from each other’s initiatives and success stories.  

The conference adopted a Delhi Declaration 2025, designed to serve as a guide for the expansion of Urban Cooperative Banking systems in India. The idea is to serve every town with a population of just 2 lakh people across the country within 5 years. This, while India has a population of more than 1.4 billion, the largest in the world.

 The international cooperative movement, called the International Cooperative Alliance (ICA) was established in 1895 in Britain, and has survived both the world wars despite sharp political differences amongst some of its member countries. It counts over a billion people in its ranks, members of three million cooperatives. The ICA also enjoys consultative status representation at the United Nations (UN).

The objective of the November 11th conference is to provide cooperative banking in every nook and cranny, so that people in small towns and villages too have access to suitable and responsive banks. The cooperative construct creates a rootedness in the community that has been a hallmark of the movement. The endeavour is to provide inexpensive credit to agriculturists and MSMEs in small towns.

There will be early adoption of digital initiatives such as Sahkar Digipay and Sahkar-Digiloan apps. NAFCUB, which has been in existence since 1977 as an apex promotional body and multi-state cooperative society, has been directed to have 1,500 banks onboard Sahkar Digipay within two years. It has also been directed to upgrade as many thriving credit societies into urban cooperative banks (UCB) as possible. The Indian cooperative sector UCBs have improved their viability by bringing down their non-performing assets (NPAs), from 2.3% to 0.6% since 2023.

Internationally recognised organisations such as Amul and the Indian Farmers Fertilizer Cooperative (IFFCO), are shining examples of success stories in the Indian cooperative sector. So why not excel also at last-mile banking?

The Ministry of Cooperation under Amit Shah has recently introduced a National Cooperative Policy 2025 which outlines a plan for modernising the cooperative sector over the next two decades. India has been a key member of the ICA ever since it established a regional office in New Delhi in 1960.It has been a driving force in shaping cooperative models that have had a favourable impact on other organisations particularly in the Asia-Pacific region.

Efforts in the ministry are ongoing to strengthen Primary Agricultural Credit Societies (PACS), dairy and fisheries cooperatives, through both digital and policy reforms. The Cooperation Ministry has already established multi-state cooperative societies for organic products, exports, and traditional seeds. All three are currently much fancied globally in the face of criticism of too much use of chemical fertiliser, and the use of genetically modified seeds.

 The Ministry of Cooperation has also set up the Tribhuvan Sahkari  University to strengthen  cooperative education and turn out skilled personnel for the sector.

 

578 words

December 5th, 2025

For: Firstpost/News18.com

Gautam Mukherjee

No comments:

Post a Comment