A week after Outlook put the spotlight on the UPA’s farm loan waiver of 2008 (a draft audit by CAG revealed shocking gaps in the implementation of the Rs 52,275-crore scheme), the story continues to simmer. The numbers are huge—an estimated 34.5 lakh eligible beneficiaries did not get any waiver; around 7 per cent or 24 lakh people who benefited were not actually eligible for the relief. The BJP has demanded a CBI probe; and the opposition parties will take up the issue when the CAG report is placed in Parliament during the Budget session starting later this month. In particular, the role of microfinance institutions (MFIS) has come under the scanner. D.K. Mittal, secretary, financial services till recently, says there is no cause for alarm, as “accounts where loans have been wrongly waived are being reversed. In the case of MFI accounts, no public sector banks are involved. Only two private banks—ICICI Bank and HDFC Bank—have been found to have done so.” A senior UPA minister also admitted that plans to have another round of loan waivers—under discussion for some time now—is now off, fiscal prudence and the damaging CAG findings leading to a rethink. To look at the on-ground impact, Outlook reporters spoke to farmers in three states: