Economic Survey 2017 slams excessive regulation in India’s agriculture sector

On demonetisation’s impact on the agriculture sector, the Economic Survey said higher winter plantings may not necessarily lead to higher production

India’s farm sector is entwined in regulation and is a living legacy of the socialist era, the Economic Survey released on Tuesday said, criticizing curbs on marketing of agriculture produce and imposition of stock limits on traders.

“While progress has been made in the last two years, producers (farmers) in many states are still required by the Agricultural Produce Marketing Act to sell only to specified middlemen in authorized markets (mandis),” the Survey said. Regulated markets deprive farmers of better returns, it added.

The Survey added: “When this system nonetheless generates price increases deemed to be excessive, the Essential Commodities Act is invoked to impose stock limits and controls on trade that are typically pro cyclical, thereby exacerbating the problem.”

The Survey’s critique comes at a time when the National Democratic Alliance government at the centre is trying to create a national market for agriculture produce and has launched an electronic platform which states have been slow to adopt.

Moreover, stock limits on traders and poor procurement have led to wholesale prices of pulses dipping below government - announced support prices, hurting farmers, following record production in 2016-17.

On the impact of demonetisation on the agriculture sector, the Survey said that contrary to fears, sowing of winter crops like wheat and chana (gram) is higher compared to the year before, but warned, “whether this will lead to a commensurate increase in production will depend on the extent to which farmers’ access to inputs - seeds, fertilizer, credit and labour - was impeded by demonetisation.”

The Survey said that the effects of demonetisation could linger into next year (2017-18) for the farm sector.

It added that “vigilance is essential to prevent other agricultural products becoming in 2017-18 what pulses were in 2015-16 in terms of supply deficiencies and consequential higher inflation.”

“If Economic Survey is the preface to the budget, farmers have little to expect from this government; the Survey lacks any focused discussion on the farm sector or the stress it is going through,” said Devinder Sharma, a Chandigarh-based agriculture policy analyst.

“There is no discussion on how to improve farm incomes. Blaming mandi regulations for farmers’ woes is a flawed argument: in Punjab where trade is regulated, farmers still get the benefit of support price, not in Bihar where there are no marketing regulations,” he added.

Newsletter

Price of goats has gone up due to lack of supply in Kannivadi goat market

As farmers are not keen to sell the goats at the Kannivadi goat market, the arrival of goats has come down for the last...

Tomato prices fall sharply in Udumalpet - produce indiscriminately thrown on the road

Tomato prices were sold at Rs 200 per kg a few months ago. Now that the price of tomatoes has fallen drastically due to...

Tomatoes sold at Rs 6 per kg in Palladam - Farmers put veil on their heads and express anguish

Farmers in Tirupur district are suffering as tomatoes were procured at just Rs 6 per kg at the Palladam uzhavar santhai....

TNAU's Dept. of Plant Pathology hosts one-day training on 'Spawn Production and Mushroom Cultivation' in Coimbatore

Over a 100 beneficiaries from Kongunadu Arts and Science College in Coimbatore participated in the training which was pr...

Coimbatore TNAU observes Parthenium Awareness Week

Dr.M.K.Kalarani, Director (Crop Management), TNAU, Coimbatore has inaugurated the Parthenium awareness campaign at TNAU...

TNAU conducts Training on Preparation of instant Foods

Two days training on “Preparation of instant Foods” will be held at Centre for Post Harvest Technology, Agricultural...