NABARD has been instrumental in grounding rural, social innovations and social enterprises in the rural hinterlands. As of May 2023, NABARD operates at 31 Regional Offices in the country. It has in the process partnered with about 4000 partner organisations in grounding many of the interventions, be it the SHG-Bank Linkage programme, tree-based tribal communities’ livelihoods initiative, the watershed approach in soil and water conservation, increasing crop productivity initiatives through the lead crop initiative or dissemination of information flow to agrarian communities through farmer clubs. Despite all this, it pays huge taxes too, to the national treasury – figuring in the top 50 tax payers consistently. NABARD virtually ploughs back all the profits for development spending. Thus the organisation had developed a huge amount of trust capital in its 3 decades of work with rural communities. NABARD's role could be broadly categorised into three functions:
1. Refinancing NABARD serves as an apex financing agency for the institutions providing investment and production credit for promoting the various developmental activities in rural areas. It co-ordinates the rural financing activities of all institutions engaged in developmental work at the field level and maintains liaison with the
Government of India, state governments,
Reserve Bank of India (RBI) and other national level institutions concerned with policy formulation. It also refinances fund from
World Bank and
Asian Development Bank to state co-operative agriculture and rural development banks (SCARDBs), state co-operative banks (SCBs), regional rural banks (RRBs), commercial banks (CBs) and other financial institutions approved by RBI. While the ultimate beneficiaries of investment credit can be individuals, partnership concerns, companies, State-owned corporations or co-operative societies, production credit is generally given to individuals.
2. Banking Supervision NABARD supervises State Cooperative Banks (StCBs),
District Cooperative Central Banks (DCCBs), and
Regional Rural Banks (RRBs) and conducts statutory inspections of these banks. It takes measures towards institution building for improving absorptive capacity of the credit delivery system, including monitoring, formulation of rehabilitation schemes, restructuring of credit institutions, training of personnel, etc. It also undertakes
monitoring and evaluation of projects refinanced by it.
3. Development NABARD is also known for its 'SHG Bank Linkage Programme' which encourages India's banks to lend to
self-help groups (SHGs). Largely because SHGs are composed mainly of poor women, this has evolved into an important Indian tool for
microfinance. By March 2006, 22
lakh SHGs representing 3.3 crore members had to be linked to credit through this programme. NABARD also has a portfolio of Natural Resource Management Programmes involving diverse fields like Watershed Development, Tribal Development and Farm Innovation through dedicated funds set up for the purpose. == Regional Offices ==