Chapter, Paragraph
1 I,3 | ensuring equitable access to credit at sustainable costs, to
2 I,4 | mechanization have made access to credit, and hence the acquisition
3 I,4 | difficulties in gaining access to credit curtail their power to purchase
4 I,7 | titles and in relation to the credit market, a lack of concern
5 I,8 | possibility of access to credit for which land is used as
6 I,9 | The Credit Market~15. Traditional regulations
7 I,9 | regulations governing the credit market help to produce the
8 I,9 | difficult to gain access to the credit needed to improve production
9 I,9 | that small loans entail for credit institutions.(11)~In rural
10 I,9 | there is often no legal credit market, so that small farmers
11 I,9 | economies, access to long-term credit tends to be directly proportionate
12 I (11)| land ownership, access to credit and distribution of wealth,
13 I,12 | advantageous taxation and credit facilities. Such advantages
14 I,14 | encouraged with tax and credit facilities in order to make
15 II,9 | have access to the land credit market, and to ensure sustainability
16 III,4 | Obstacles Preventing Access to Credit~49. Concrete access to legal
17 III,4 | Concrete access to legal credit is another issue to be met
18 III,4 | small borrowers means that credit institutions are reluctant
19 III,4 | recourse to the informal credit sector, with all the costs
20 III,4 | include support for the credit demands of the new farm
21 III,4 | reduce the handling costs of credit operations.~Credit must
22 III,4 | costs of credit operations.~Credit must be facilitated and
23 III,6 | schooling and easier access to credit. This will improve the quality
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