Why MP govt's price scheme not a saviour for horticulture farmers

The state government is planning to set up a horticulture price commission

Sanjeeb Mukherjee  |  New Delhi 

Farmers
Farmers

The Cabinet on Tuesday approved a scheme under which will be compensated if the market price of a crop falls below its minimum support price (MSP). Though it’s a praiseworthy attempt, the Mukhyamantri Bhavantar Bhugtan Yojana (CM's Price Deficit Financing Scheme) doesn’t cover millions of — many of whom held protests for months to get remunerative prices.

For them, the state government is planning to set up a price commission to address price fall-related issues and, maybe, fix a minimum price.

Implementing a price deficit payment plan for crops, nonetheless, is difficult because there is no uniform reference price like the for onions, or

Last year, around 73 per cent of the one million quintals of purchased by the from was destroyed owing to inadequate storage space, the government told the Assembly earlier.

The Mukhyamantri Bhavantar Bhugtan Yojana, as of now, covers eight and pulses whose production in 2017 is estimated to be around 14.25 million tonnes (mt). These include soybean, maize, tuar, moong, urad and groundnut. The scheme seeks to compensate by depositing the price difference between the market price and directly into their accounts. However, the compensation won’t exceed the modal price. 

The modal price will be the average market prices for a particular commodity over a two-month period in and two other states where the crop is grown and traded.

will have to register their crops at village-level cooperative societies along with their Aadhaar and bank account numbers. Enrolments will open from September 11 for a month. 

The compensation will be paid to the farmers’ directly after verification of mandi receipts. In June, several parts of saw large-scale agitation from due to a sudden and sharp drop in prices of several commodities, particularly and pulses. 

The agitation turned violent when six were shot in Mandsaur district on June 6.

The new deficit price payment scheme is not the first attempt at directly compensating for a price fall, and has been attempted several times earlier. The models might have been different, though.

In 2015, a pilot project of deficiency price payment for cotton growers was started in Hinganghat taluka of Maharashtra. It was called the Direct Payment Deficiency System (DPDS). Under this, were to get the difference between the and market price should the market price fall below the MSP, directly in their The plan to roll out the scheme in other parts of the country couldn’t materialise, as the pilot didn’t show encouraging results.

Even earlier, in 2009-10, a scheme of deficiency price payment for betel nut (supari) was started in Goa’s Ponda. Under this, the state government decided the base price of Rs 100 a kg, and if a farmer sold the betel nuts below the base price, it paid them the difference.

NITI Aayog member Ramesh Chand, in a report in 2015, had also advocated the idea of deficiency price payment in case of price fall, to compensate and also to save the states from the problems of storage and transportation.

First Published: Thu, August 31 2017. 02:02 IST