Business Definition for: agricultural credit
agricultural credit
loans, notes, bills of exchange, and bankers' acceptances financing agricultural transactions. Banks lend to farmers for a variety of purposes, including (1) short-term credit to cover operating expenses; (2) intermediate credit for investment in farm equipment and real estate improvements; (3) long-term credit for acquisition of farm real estate and construction financing; and (4) debt repayment and refinancing. Commercial banks are the largest source of agricultural credit, followed by the Farm Credit Banks.
See also
Farm Credit System (FCS)
,
FARMER MAC
,
Farmers Home Administration (FmHA)
Related Terms:
nationwide cooperative system of banks and associations providing credit to farmers, agricultural concerns, and related businesses. The system is comprised of the Banks for Cooperatives, which makes loans to farmer-owned marketing, supply, and service cooperatives, and rural utilities; the Farm Credit Banks, which make short and intermediate term farm loans secured by real estate; and the Federal Farm Credit Banks Funding Corp., which acts as a conduit through which the FCS issues debt in the credit markets. The Farm Credit Banks were created by merger of the old Federal Intermediate Credit Banks, making intermediate term farm loans, and the Federal Land Banks. A new agency, the Federal Agricultural Mortgage Corporation (farmer mac) was established by the Agricultural Credit Act of 1987 to create a secondary market for farm credit. Bonds, notes, and other obligations issued by Farm System institutions, other than the FAC, are insured by the Farm Credit System Insurance Corporation. Another federal agency, the Farm Credit Financial Assistance Corporation, provides capital assistance by issuing government guaranteed bonds. The Farm Credit System, originally capitalized by the federal government, is now self-funding and owned by its member-borrowers.
agency of the U.S. Department of Agriculture supplying loans, including operating loans, water conservation loans, and residential mortgages to farmers in rural areas. Farmers Home Administration loans are funded by annual appropriations by Congress, and by private lenders, whose loans are guaranteed up to 90% of principal and interest by the Farmers Home Administration.
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