Primary Agricultural Credit Societies (PACS) are grassroots-level cooperative institutions that provide short-term credit and basic financial services to farmers in rural areas. They function as the lowest tier of the short-term cooperative credit structure in India and directly interact with rural borrowers.
PACS are usually formed at the village or gram panchayat level. Their main purpose is to provide timely and affordable credit to farmers for agricultural activities such as buying seeds, fertilisers, pesticides, farm equipment and meeting other cultivation-related expenses.
Key points:
- PACS are village-level cooperative credit institutions.
- They provide short-term and medium-term agricultural loans.
- They are linked with District Central Cooperative Banks and State Cooperative Banks.
- They work on the principle of mutual cooperation among members.
- Farmers are both members and beneficiaries of these societies.
In India’s rural credit system, PACS act as the last-mile link between farmers and the formal institutional credit network.
Structure and Functions
PACS form the base of the cooperative credit system. The broader short-term cooperative credit structure generally works in three tiers:
- State Cooperative Banks at the state level.
- District Central Cooperative Banks at the district level.
- Primary Agricultural Credit Societies at the village level.
PACS receive funds from higher cooperative banks and provide loans to member farmers. They also collect repayments and help in delivering various agricultural services at the local level.
Major functions include:
- Providing crop loans and other agricultural credit.
- Distributing fertilisers, seeds and agricultural inputs.
- Supporting procurement and marketing of agricultural produce.
- Promoting savings and thrift among rural members.
- Acting as local institutions for implementation of government schemes.
- Providing services such as storage, warehousing, dairy, fisheries and other rural activities where they function as multipurpose societies.
Traditionally, PACS were mainly credit institutions. However, recent reforms are trying to convert them into multipurpose rural service centres so that they can support a wider range of economic activities.
Recent Developments
PACS have recently gained importance because the Government of India is working to modernise and expand them under the Ministry of Cooperation.
One major reform is the computerisation of PACS. The project aims to bring PACS onto a common digital platform through an ERP-based system. This is expected to improve transparency, accounting, loan processing, auditing and monitoring. The project was initially approved for about 63,000 functional PACS with an outlay of ₹2,516 crore, and later updates mention expansion of coverage to around 79,630 PACS.
Another important reform is the adoption of Model Bye-Laws for making PACS multipurpose. These bye-laws aim to improve professionalism, transparency and accountability while allowing PACS to undertake diversified activities beyond agricultural credit.
The government has also announced a plan to establish 2 lakh new multipurpose PACS, dairy and fishery cooperative societies to cover all panchayats and villages where such cooperative institutions are absent.
Significance
PACS are important because they provide institutional credit to farmers at the grassroots level. For small and marginal farmers, timely credit is essential to avoid dependence on moneylenders and informal sources of finance.
Their significance includes:
- Improving access to affordable rural credit.
- Reducing dependence on informal moneylenders.
- Supporting small and marginal farmers.
- Strengthening agricultural input delivery.
- Helping in procurement, storage and marketing of produce.
- Promoting financial inclusion in rural areas.
- Supporting cooperative-based rural development.
- Acting as a platform for government schemes and welfare delivery.
If PACS become financially strong and technologically modern, they can serve as local hubs for credit, input supply, warehousing, dairy, fisheries, digital services and other rural livelihoods.
Challenges and Way Forward
Despite their importance, many PACS face structural and operational challenges.
Major challenges include:
- Weak financial health of many societies.
- Poor governance and political interference.
- Low professional capacity and lack of trained staff.
- Delayed audits and poor accounting practices.
- Limited digital infrastructure.
- Regional imbalance in performance.
- Dependence on higher cooperative banks for funds.
- Low member participation in some areas.
To strengthen PACS, reforms must focus on both financial viability and institutional accountability.
Important measures include:
- Completing computerisation and linking PACS with a common digital platform.
- Improving audit, accounting and transparency standards.
- Training staff and elected members in financial management.
- Converting PACS into multipurpose service centres.
- Expanding warehousing, procurement, dairy, fisheries and input distribution services.
- Strengthening member participation and democratic functioning.
- Ensuring better coordination with NABARD, cooperative banks and state governments.
- Reducing political interference and improving professional management.
PACS can become powerful engines of rural development if they move beyond narrow credit delivery and evolve into transparent, digital and multipurpose cooperative institutions



