๐พ Agriculture & Rural Economy
MSP, Green Revolution, APMC, land reforms, farm credit.
๐พ Feeding 1.4 Billion
Agriculture contributes ~15% of India's GDP but supports ~45% of the workforce. India is among the world's top producers of rice, wheat, sugarcane, cotton, pulses, and spices.
Key terms:
โข MSP (Minimum Support Price) โ government announces minimum price for crops before sowing season. If market price falls below MSP, government buys at MSP through FCI (Food Corporation of India). 23 crops have MSP.
โข APMC (Agricultural Produce Market Committee) โ state-run mandis where farmers sell produce. Farmers must sell through licensed traders at APMCs in many states โ limits farmers' choices.
โข Farm Laws 2020 โ tried to allow farmers to sell outside APMC, allow contract farming. Repealed in 2021 after protests.
โข FCI (Food Corporation of India) โ procures, stores, distributes food grains. Manages buffer stocks.
After independence, India needed to break the zamindari (landlord) system where few landlords owned vast land while most farmers were landless.
Key reforms:
โข Abolition of Zamindari (1950s) โ zamindars lost their rights, land transferred to tillers
โข Tenancy reforms โ fixed fair rents, security of tenure for tenant farmers
โข Land ceiling โ maximum land any person can own (varies by state, ~5-15 acres irrigated)
โข Surplus land redistributed to landless farmers
โข Bhoodan movement โ Vinoba Bhave asked landlords to voluntarily donate land. Got 40 lakh acres.
1960s: India faced severe food shortage, importing wheat from USA under PL-480 ("ship to mouth" era).
Green Revolution (1966-77):
โข HYV seeds (High Yielding Variety) โ developed by Norman Borlaug, adapted by MS Swaminathan
โข Chemical fertilizers (nitrogen, phosphorus, potassium)
โข Improved irrigation
โข Result: Wheat went from 11 MT (1960) to 76 MT (2020). India became food-exporting nation.
โข First in Punjab, Haryana, Western UP
Problems: Groundwater depletion, soil degradation, farmer debt, reduced biodiversity.
From Farm to Market โ India's Food Chain
AnimationEach step in the chain has inefficiencies โ middlemen take 20-40% of the price farmers deserve.
Agricultural Issues & Solutions
Interactiveโข Announced by government before the sowing season
โข Floor price โ if market price falls below MSP, government buys at MSP
โข Protects farmers from distress selling
โข Set for 23 crops based on CACP recommendations
โข Does NOT guarantee that farmers actually get MSP โ market often gives less
Procurement Price (Support Price):
โข Price at which government agencies (FCI, state agencies) actually buy from farmers
โข Usually equal to MSP or slightly above
โข Buying happens through mandis and procurement centres
Issue Price / Central Issue Price (CIP):
โข Price at which FCI sells grains to state governments for PDS
โข Below procurement price โ difference is food subsidy
โข States further subsidize before selling to consumers
Summary: Government buys at MSP (procurement price), stores it, then sells cheaper to PDS (issue price). The difference = food subsidy bill. India spends Rs 2 lakh crore+ annually on food subsidies.
Steps being taken (Ashok Dalwai Committee recommendations):
1. Improved productivity โ better seeds, irrigation, precision farming
2. Cost reduction โ soil health cards, correct fertilizer use, micro-irrigation
3. Profitable prices โ MSP reform, market linkage, reduce middlemen
4. Non-farm income โ allied activities: animal husbandry, fisheries, agro-processing
5. Risk management โ PM Fasal Bima Yojana (crop insurance)
6. Direct income support โ PM-KISAN Rs 6,000/year
7. Market access โ e-NAM (National Agriculture Market) online trading
8. Credit access โ Kisan Credit Card, NABARD
Current average farmer income: ~Rs 10,218/month (NABARD, 2019). Target was to reach Rs 20,000+ by 2022.