Direct Payment of Minimum Support Price
Context
After the recent orders from the Food Corporation of India (FCI), the farm unions warned that the Centre’s insistence on direct payment of Minimum Support Price (MSP) could derail the crop procurement process.
Orders from FCI
Direct Payment of Minimum Support Price (MSP)
The Centre wants to make direct online MSP payment to farmers’ bank accounts, to remove middlemen from the process.
MSP is the price that government agencies pay whenever they procure the particular crop.
Currently, arhtiyas (commission agents) get the payments in their accounts, which they in turn pay to farmers through cheques.
The Centre has to pay 2.5% commission to arhtiyas who facilitate procurement of the crop from farmers to government agencies and take commission for that from the government.
Jamabandhi System
FCI order stipulates that tenant farmers and sharecroppers must produce a jamabandhi.
Jamabandhi is a legal agreement proving that they have the right to till leased land, in order to get paid for procured crops.
The FCI’s also proposed to tighten quality requirements for wheat and paddy procurement.
SIGNIFICANCE
Transparency and Accountability – The FCI has insisted that direct payment to farmers’ bank accounts, bypassing the powerful arhtiyas or commission agents, will lead to greater transparency and accountability.
Non-Discriminatory in Nature- There is no selection bias in choosing the beneficiaries based on attributes like caste and land size.
Challenges to the FCI Order
Since arhtiyas play a key role in the Punjab and Haryana farm ecosystem by providing farm loans, the move has been opposed by a large section of farmers, as well as the Punjab government.
According to farm unions, implementing direct payment in haste can lead to many complex problems that will exclude so many farmers from getting their price of the crop.
Thousands of sharecroppers do not have Jamabandhi or legal agreements and will be hit hard.
The FCI’s proposals to tighten quality requirements for wheat and paddy procurement are also being opposed.
At a broader level, farmers connected their issues with the FCI with their existing demands to repeal the farm laws and enact a legal guarantee for procurement of all crops and minimum support prices.