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Assam ginger farmers use plastic money

Carrying cash can be a liability in militant country. So 3,500 small and marginal ginger farmers became possessors of the G-Card or the ginger card. Rahul Karmakar tells us...

Updated on: Dec 09, 2007 10:56 PM IST
Hindustan Times | By , Diphu (Karbi Anglong)
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Carrying cash can be a liability in militant country. So, farmers in a remote, guerrilla-infested district in Assam have gone for the next best option—a “spicy” debit-cum-credit card.

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HT Image

Eight months after forming a growers’ group, some 3,500 small and marginal ginger farmers in Karbi Anglong district became possessors of the G-Card here last week. G-Card, specific to the pungent ginger, is India’s first commodity-based debit-cum-credit card that allows holders in remote rural areas to go cashless for almost everything.

Take the case of David Chongloi, a ginger farmer in the district’s remote Singhason belt. Offloading his produce at the local mandi was a risky proposition given the propensity of militants to readily deduct “revolutionary taxes” on cash transactions. Now, he hopes to breathe easy with the all-purpose G-Card that enables him to sell ginger, buy essentials, and get technical support and the desirable market linkage.

For fellow farmer Leader Tisso from the Jirikinding area, the small yellow card carrying his photograph is like a magic wand. “My area is relatively free from militant trouble, so I might not need this card as much as the others,” he says. But what matters most for him is that the G-Card entails him to a loan of Rs 10,000 to expand his ginger farm beyond the 2 bighas he owns.

 
ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Rahul Karmakar

Rahul Karmakar was part of Hindustan Times’ nationwide network of correspondents that brings news, analysis and information to its readers. He no longer works with the Hindustan Times.

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