The NITI Aayog has come up with a proposal to give relief to distressed farmers which, among other suggestions, is being considered by the government. The proposal will have a minimum impact on the exchequer and will be the least ‘market-distortionary’, say NITI Aayog officials.
The area-based income compensation (ABIC) scheme says that farmers should be paid the difference between the actual price they get and the state-mandated minimum support price (MSP).
The compensation, according to this model, will be determined on a per acre basis by using district-level estimates of marketable surplus and prices in the harvest season.
The payout under this proposal will be different for each district and could be implemented easily as the price data is reported on a daily basis from over 3,000 mandis across the country in the government’s own agmarket.nic.in portal.
The model could also be used to compensate for past losses as the agmarket portal has the arrival and the price data of the past months as well.
The payment will not be applicable in those districts where government procurement for the public distribution system is in operation as the prices in such places will, in any case, be closer to the MSP.
“This method of payment will take care of productivity variations as well as price variations across the mandis and will be the least market-distortionary,” a senior NITI Aayog official told Business Standard.
In the other models of income transfer currently being talked about, whether it is the Rythu Bandhu of Telangana or the Krushak Assistance for Livelihood and Income Augmentation (Kalia) of Odisha, payment is paid on a per acre and per household basis, irrespective of the quantity of agriculture produce sold or produced by the farmers.
Agriculture Minister Radha Mohan Singh, speaking at a Business Standard event, also said that the government was working out measures to directly transfer the MSP to farmers.
All farmers will need to do is give their land and crop production details to the government through a special portal. In return, they will be compensated for the difference between the MSP and the actual market price on a per acre basis after the harvest is over.
For example, the Aayog found that in Karnataka’s Belgaum district, if all the produce of the farmers was sold or procured at the MSP, the farmers would have received Rs 176 crore more than what they received at actual price in 2017-18. This amount, if given to farmers as income compensation for price loss, will come to around Rs 1,670 per acre per farmer.