Agriculture Market: APMC, MSP & Food Distribution

April 7, 2024 785 0

Agricultural Produce Market Committees (APMC)

  • Established by the States
  • Aim: to eliminate the incidence of exploitation of the farmers by the intermediaries; food produce must be brought to the market; sales are made through auction.
  • E-NAM [UPSC 2018]: Launched in 2016; Pan-India electronic trading portal for farm produce. It provides the farmers access to nationwide markets, with prices commensurate with the quality of their produce. 
  • Markets in agricultural products are regulated under the Agricultural Produce Market Committee Act enacted by States. [UPSC 2015] 

Finance/ Credit

  • Priority Sector Lending Sectors: Agriculture, Micro, Small and Medium Enterprises, Export Credit, Education, Housing, Social Infrastructure, Renewable Energy, etc [UPSC 2013]
  • All scheduled commercial banks and foreign banks (with a sizable presence in India) are required to set aside 40% of their Adjusted Net Bank Credit (ANDC) for lending to these sectors.
  • Regional rural banks, Co-operative banks and Small Finance banks have to allocate 75% of ANBC (Adjusted Net Bank Credit) to PSL.
  • MSP policy, Kisan Credit Card scheme, PM-KISAN 
  • Institutions: Cooperatives, NABARD, RRB’s
All About The Kisan Credit Card Scheme

  • Under the Kisan Credit Card scheme, short-term credit support is given to farmers for: [UPSC 2020]
  • Working capital for maintenance of farm assets.
  • Consumption requirements of farm households.
  • Post-harvest expense 
  • Share in credit flow to the agriculture of rural cooperatives is only 12.1%, as compared to 76% of Scheduled Commercial Banks (SCBs), and 11.9% of Regional Rural Banks; District Central Co-operative Banks (DCCBs) mobilize deposits from the public and provide credit to the public and PACS. [UPSC  2011, 2020]

Service Area Approach:  

  • Introduced in 1989 as part of the Lead Bank Scheme
  • Under SAA, each commercial bank branch in the rural and semi-urban area was designated to serve 15 to 25 villages for the planned and orderly development of the areas and the concerned branch was responsible for meeting the needs of bank credit of its service area. [UPSC 2012, 2019]

Minimum Support Price

  • Recommended By: Commission for Agricultural Costs and Prices (CACP); Approved by: Cabinet Committee on Economic Affairs (Headed by PM) ; Nodal Agency: Food Corporation of India (FCI).
  • As per Swaminathan Commission for Agricultural Cost and Prices (CACP), there are three types of production costs
  • A2: Actual paid out cost.
  • A2+FL: Actual paid out cost plus imputed value of family labor. 
  • C2: Comprehensive cost including imputed rent and interest on owned land and capital.
  • CACP considers both (A2+FL) and C2 costs while recommending MSPs;  Economic cost of food grains to the Food Corporation of India is Minimum Support Price and bonus (if any) paid to the farmers plus Procurement incidentals and distribution cost. [UPSC 2019]
  • MSP is Declared for: [UPSC 2018]
    • Cereals (7): Paddy, Wheat, Barley, Jowar, Bajra, Maise and Ragi.
    • Pulses (5): Gram, Arhar/ Tur, Moong, Urad and Lentil.
    • Oilseeds (8): Groundnut, Rapeseed/Mustard, Toria, Soyabean, Sunflower seed, Sesamum, Safflower seed and Niger seed.
The tribal population uses niger seed oil for cooking, the press cake post oil-extraction as livestock feed, and also consume the seeds as a condiment. Niger seed oil has medicinal properties, which is the reason for its commercial demand by the cosmetics, perfumeries and other allied industries. [UPSC 2023]
    • Copra; De-husked coconut; Raw cotton; Raw jute
  • Sugarcane [Fair and Remunerative Price]: Governed by the statutory provisions of the Sugarcane (Control) Order, 1966 issued under the Essential Commodities Act (ECA), 1955 ]. [UPSC 2015]
  • Procurement of all cereals, pulses and oilseeds at Minimum support price is open-ended. It is limited since our buffer stock is limited. 
    • Market price has no link with minimum support price and it can go below or above the MSP. [UPSC 2020]
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Commission for Agricultural Costs and Prices (CACP)

  • Origin: Formed in 1965, it is a statutory body and comes under the attached office of the Ministry of Agriculture and Farmers Welfare.
  • Commission: Chairman; Member Secretary; one Member (Official) and two Members (Non-Official). 
  • Non-official Members: representatives/Associates with the farming community.

NABARD

  • Established: NABARD Act of 1981.
  • Objective: providing and regulating credit to farmers, small- scale industries, cottage and village industries, handicrafts etc. in rural areas. 
  • Refinances: the financial institutions like state cooperative agriculture and rural development banks (SCARDBs), state cooperative banks (SCBs), regional rural banks (RRBs), commercial banks (CBs) which finance the rural sector. 
  • Promotes: SHG-Bank linkage programme for encouraging banks to lend to SHGs.

Small Farmer Agri Business Consortium

  • Autonomous Society promoted by the Ministry of Agriculture and Farmers Welfare.
  • Objective: To promote agri-business project development in their respective States; Farmer Producer Organizations (FPOs)/Farmer Producer Companies (FPCs); Implementation of e-NAM platform.

Agriculture and Processed Food Products Export Development Authority (APEDA) 

  • Statutory body under Ministry of Commerce and Industry. 
  • Promotes export of agricultural and processed food products from India.
  • Entrusted with the responsibility to monitor import of sugar.
  • FPOs: A type of Producer organization where the members are farmers.
  • AGMARK: Certification mark employed on agricultural products in India, assuring that they conform to a set of standards approved by the Directorate of Marketing and Inspection under the Ministry of Agriculture. 
    • The present AGMARK standards cover quality guidelines for 222 different commodities.

Food Distribution

  • Public Distribution System: Nation-wide portability of ration card holders under the National Food Security Act, 2013 (NFSA), through the One Nation-One Ration Card system.
  • Calculation of Cost: The economic cost of food grains procured by the FCI is a total of MSP and bonus (if any) paid to the farmers plus the procurement incidentals and distribution cost. 
  • Procurement Incidentals: are the initial costs incurred during procurement of food grains. 
  • Distribution Costs: It includes freight, handling charges, storage costs in godowns, losses during transit etc.
  • Negotiable Warehouse Receipts (NWR)
    • Launched: 2011, by the Ministry of Consumer Affairs, Food & Public Distribution.
    • Objective: Farmers can seek loans from banks against the warehouse receipts issued to them against their storage. 
    • Regulated: Warehousing Development and Regulatory Authority (WDRA).
  • Receipts Issued: Warehouses registered with the WDRA → fully negotiable instrument backed by a Central legislation.
  • Electronic Negotiable Warehouse Receipt (e-NWR) System → launched in 2017
Food Corporation of India (FCI)

  • Nodal agency under Ministry of Consumer Affairs, Food and Public Distribution
  • It procures food grains:  At minimum support price (MSP) and On an open-ended basis.

Contract Farming

  • Meaning: Contract farming is based on a pre-harvest agreement between the buyers and producers. 
    • It is under the Concurrent List under the 7th Schedule of the Indian constitution.
  • Model Contract Farming Act, 2018 
    • Ensures buying of the entire pre-agreed quantity and price from the farmers. 
    • All pre-production; production; post-production services are under its ambit. 
    • Bars the transfer of ownership of the farmer’s land to sponsor companies.
    • Contract farming will remain outside the ambit of the APMC Act of the states/UTs. 
    • Limits of stockholding of agricultural produce will not be applicable on produce purchased under contract farming.
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