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UPSC Editorial Analysis: Demand for Legalising MSP

Kartavya Desk Staff

*General Studies-3; Topic: Issues related to direct and indirect farm subsidies and minimum support prices; Public Distribution System- objectives, functioning, limitations, revamping; issues of buffer stocks and food security; *

Introduction

• The renewed farmers’ agitation at the Khanauri border between Punjab and Haryana, has reignited the debate on the necessity of a legal guarantee for Minimum Support Prices (MSP).

Background

• MSP is a government-set price at which crops are procured from farmers to ensure they get a minimum income, regardless of market fluctuations.

Currently, MSP is announced for 22 crops, but procurement is largely confined to wheat and paddy.

Farmers argue that an MSP without legal backing leaves them vulnerable to market forces, exploitative intermediaries, and agribusiness firms.

• Successive governments have avoided giving MSP a legal guarantee, citing concerns over market distortions, fiscal burdens, and WTO compliance.

Rising Support for a Legal MSP

• Various political parties and the Parliamentary Standing Committee on Agriculture have voiced their support.

• State governments, such as Maharashtra and Karnataka, have attempted MSP enforcement through state-level initiatives.

• The Andhra Pradesh Farmers’ Produce Support Price Act, 2023, provides a possible model, ensuring no transactions occur below MSP while enabling barrier-free trade.

• Farmers demand the Swaminathan Commission’s recommendations of fixing MSP at 1.5 times the cost of production be implemented.

The Role of Intermediaries in Agrarian Markets

• A key roadblock to legal MSP is the entrenched trader-intermediary system, which benefits from price fluctuations.

• Retail markups over wholesale prices indicate that farmers receive a disproportionately low share of final consumer prices: Rice in Karnataka: 120% markup Gram in Tamil Nadu: 130% markup Onion in Madhya Pradesh: 210% markup

Rice in Karnataka: 120% markup

Gram in Tamil Nadu: 130% markup

Onion in Madhya Pradesh: 210% markup

• This highlights the need for direct market access for farmers, eliminating unnecessary intermediaries.

Challenges in Legalising Minimum Support Price (MSP)

Providing a legal guarantee for MSP would require massive financial outlays. The government would need to procure, store, and distribute a vast quantity of crops, increasing fiscal pressure.

Legal MSP enforcement could push up food inflation, affecting consumers, especially the poor and middle class.

• The World Trade Organization (WTO) allows agricultural subsidies up to 10% of the total value of agricultural production. A legally backed MSP would likely exceed this limit, leading to trade disputes.

Legal MSP could disrupt supply-demand equilibrium, leading to overproduction of certain crops and market inefficiencies.

Farmers may focus only on MSP-backed crops, neglecting horticulture, pulses, and oilseeds, reducing agricultural diversity.

Large landholders with better resources can take advantage of MSP, while small and marginal farmers (86% of all farmers) struggle due to lack of access.

Way Forward

Strengthening the Agricultural Produce Market Committee (APMC) Act

• Amend state APMC Acts to ensure that no crop is purchased below MSP. Introduce penalties for violations by private traders and agribusiness firms. Strengthen e-NAM (National Agricultural Market) to provide transparent, competitive pricing mechanisms.

• Amend state APMC Acts to ensure that no crop is purchased below MSP.

• Introduce penalties for violations by private traders and agribusiness firms.

Strengthen e-NAM (National Agricultural Market) to provide transparent, competitive pricing mechanisms.

Government Procurement and Price Stabilisation

• The government must be prepared to procure at least 25% of total crop production under the Price Support Scheme (PSS), particularly during the post-harvest price slump. Establish a Price Stabilisation Revolving Fund (PSRF) in each state, backed by the Centre, to ensure timely procurement. Focus procurement on 21 MSP-covered food crops and key vegetables such as potato, tomato, and onion.

• The government must be prepared to procure at least 25% of total crop production under the Price Support Scheme (PSS), particularly during the post-harvest price slump.

• Establish a Price Stabilisation Revolving Fund (PSRF) in each state, backed by the Centre, to ensure timely procurement.

• Focus procurement on 21 MSP-covered food crops and key vegetables such as potato, tomato, and onion.

Revisiting Food Security Policies

• The National Food Security Act (NFSA), 2013, must be reoriented to include a broader procurement basket. Public Distribution System (PDS) should diversify beyond rice and wheat, integrating pulses, millets, and oilseeds. Leverage procurement to meet nutritional needs in mid-day meal schemes, Anganwadis, and ration shops.

• The National Food Security Act (NFSA), 2013, must be reoriented to include a broader procurement basket.

Public Distribution System (PDS) should diversify beyond rice and wheat, integrating pulses, millets, and oilseeds.

• Leverage procurement to meet nutritional needs in mid-day meal schemes, Anganwadis, and ration shops.

Post-Harvest Infrastructure and Financing

• Invest in cold storage, warehouse, and logistics to minimize post-harvest losses. Provide pledge loans to farmers to prevent distress sales after harvest. Expand crop insurance under PM Fasal Bima Yojana to cover price fluctuations.

• Invest in cold storage, warehouse, and logistics to minimize post-harvest losses.

• Provide pledge loans to farmers to prevent distress sales after harvest.

• Expand crop insurance under PM Fasal Bima Yojana to cover price fluctuations.

Strengthening Market Assurance Schemes

• The Pradhan Mantri Annadata Aay Sanrakshan Abhiyan (PM-AASHA) introduced in 2018 attempted to bridge MSP shortfalls through: Price Support Scheme (PSS): Direct procurement at MSP. Bhavantar Bhugtan Yojana (BBY): Compensation for price differentials. Market Assurance Scheme (MAS): Empowering states to procure when prices crash. However, these schemes have seen poor implementation and need revival to complement MSP legalisation.

• The Pradhan Mantri Annadata Aay Sanrakshan Abhiyan (PM-AASHA) introduced in 2018 attempted to bridge MSP shortfalls through: Price Support Scheme (PSS): Direct procurement at MSP. Bhavantar Bhugtan Yojana (BBY): Compensation for price differentials. Market Assurance Scheme (MAS): Empowering states to procure when prices crash.

Price Support Scheme (PSS): Direct procurement at MSP.

Bhavantar Bhugtan Yojana (BBY): Compensation for price differentials.

Market Assurance Scheme (MAS): Empowering states to procure when prices crash.

• However, these schemes have seen poor implementation and need revival to complement MSP legalisation.

Fiscal Feasibility of Legal MSP

• A ₹5 lakh crore fund nationwide can sustain MSP at Swaminathan Commission levels. Redirecting subsidies from inefficient schemes could offset much of this cost.

• A ₹5 lakh crore fund nationwide can sustain MSP at Swaminathan Commission levels.

• Redirecting subsidies from inefficient schemes could offset much of this cost.

Conclusion

• The ongoing farmers’ agitation underscores the need for a structural overhaul of India’s agrarian economy.

• A legal MSP is not just about guaranteeing prices—it is about ensuring food security, rural stability, and economic justice.

Practice Question:

Critically analyze the role of Minimum Support Price (MSP) in ensuring farmers’ income security in India. Should MSP be given legal backing? Discuss the challenges and implications of such a move. (250 words)

AI-assisted content, editorially reviewed by Kartavya Desk Staff.

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