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State of Marginal Farmers in India 2025

Kartavya Desk Staff

Context: A new report titled State of Marginal Farmers in India 2025, released on Kisan Diwas (December 23) by the Forum of Enterprises for Equitable Development (FEED), reveals that less than 25% of India’s marginal farmers are linked to agricultural cooperatives.

About State of Marginal Farmers in India 2025:

What it is?

• The State of Marginal Farmers in India 2025 is an empirical assessment by FEED examining how agricultural cooperatives, especially Primary Agricultural Credit Societies (PACS), serve marginal farmers (landholding < 1 hectare).

Key trends:

Low cooperative inclusion: Less than 25% of marginal farmers are active cooperative members, despite marginal farmers constituting nearly 60–70% of India’s agricultural households, indicating deep structural exclusion.

Regional disparities: Participation is particularly weak in Bihar, Tripura and Himachal Pradesh, reflecting uneven institutional reach and state capacity.

Structural barriers: Complex membership rules, long distances to PACS, inadequate capitalisation and caste- and gender-based exclusion restrict marginal farmers’ access, pushing them towards informal credit markets.

Digital divide: Digitisation remains limited — 77.8% of cooperatives in Tripura and 25% in Bihar reported no digital tool usage — with women and elderly farmers facing the greatest skill gaps.

Gender leadership gap: While over 21 lakh women are cooperative members, only about 3,355 women serve as directors nationwide, highlighting symbolic inclusion without decision-making power.

Positive outcomes where access exists: Among cooperative-linked marginal farmers, 45% reported income gains and nearly 49% improved livelihood security, underscoring the transformative potential of inclusive cooperatives.

Relevance for UPSC syllabus

GS Paper I (Indian Society): Issues of social exclusion, gender inequality and marginalisation in rural institutions.

• Issues of social exclusion, gender inequality and marginalisation in rural institutions.

GS Paper II (Governance): Role of cooperatives, decentralised institutions, inclusive service delivery and public policy design.

• Role of cooperatives, decentralised institutions, inclusive service delivery and public policy design.

GS Paper III (Agriculture & Economy): Agricultural credit, institutional reforms, rural livelihoods, informal vs formal finance.

• Agricultural credit, institutional reforms, rural livelihoods, informal vs formal finance.

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Articles in our archive published before our editorial team was expanded. Legacy content is periodically reviewed and updated by our current editors.

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