Lower crop prices and weak nominal farm growth weighed on rural incomes in 2025, but GST cuts, welfare support, and rising consumption helped stabilise demand and sentiment
Farmers across Maharashtra who missed e-crop survey registration will be allowed to register through an offline process till January 15 to help them sell their produce at government procurement centres, said Revenue Minister Chandrashekhar Bawankule on Saturday. He made the announcement in the legislative assembly while replying to a calling attention motion, a procedure that allows a member to bring an urgent public matter to a minister's notice. The online e-crop survey portal has been closed and cannot be reopened due to technical constraints, but the government has decided to open an offline window so that genuine farmers do not suffer losses, said Bawankule. Maharashtra's e-crop survey, known as E-Pik Pahani', allows farmers to self-report their crop details via a mobile application. Bawankule said farmers who failed to complete the e-crop survey registration due to technical issues or other reasons can submit offline applications to the concerned authorities till January 15.
Things are in place for a good rabi harvest. But farmers must contend with poor prices for their kharif harvest. And that may have a knock-on effect on rabi prices in a vicious cycle
The government had allowed the duty-free import of yellow peas in December 2023 and subsequently extended it thrice till February 28 to boost domestic supplies after the local crop failed
The government targets shipments of Rs 50,000 crore annually
The state wants to encourage farmers for crop diversification and go for wheat, gram, and peas in this season
Despite the price hikes, margins continued to be under pressure in the quarter
This will be the lowest output in two years, according to first estimate
After a pandemic slump, consumer goods makers are banking on a good monsoon but erratic rain patterns make a sustained recovery open to question
Prices across grains, oilseed and softs markets have rallied as supply shortfalls abound
SOPA says surge driven by excessive speculative activity in exchanges
They have dispensed with middleman, get better crop prices
Report points to the possibility of grains being hoarded by farmers and traders to be sold at a later date when mandi operations and logistics normalise
The forecast is expected to be available from the 2019 kharif season for a few crops and will be expanded to cover others, depending on the success of the models
Upside in mustard seed and maize prices too might be capped