Agricultural Marketing in India
Agricultural Marketing in India
Agricultural Marketing in India
[Type text]
Integrated Learning Programme (ILP)-2017
IASbaba
In the previous Value Add notes, we have already covered about the agricultural processes in
India including the challenges faced by the India agriculture in Geography Value Add and
Economics Value Add. In this module we will specifically focus on the marketing aspect of
agricultural products (included in GS Paper 3).
India is still a predominantly agricultural country with agriculture and allied activities
contributing to 17.32% of GDP (much higher than World’s average of 6.1) and almost 58% of
India’s population directly/indirectly dependent on agriculture. Thus proper agricultural
marketing becomes an integral part of the livelihood of these people.
Market is essentially a place where sellers and buyers meet. But agricultural marketing is
slightly different from industrial marketing in following ways:
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A major difference that separates agricultural market and industrial market is that, both
the demand and supply of agricultural goods are inelastic. i.e in case of bumper crop,
farmer will not get the benefit because of the fall in price and in case of poor crop,
farmer won’t be able to take the advantage. This is called Farmer’s Paradox.
The term agricultural marketing include all those activities which are mostly related to the
procurement, grading, storing, transporting and selling of the agricultural produce. Agricultural
marketing comprises all operations involved in the movement of farm produce from the
producer to the ultimate consumer.
Direct Selling to a middleman: Direct selling of surplus produce in the Village market or
to money lenders or local traders which will further deal with the product. These
markets are not organized and small farmers tend to sell their products like this to save
transportation cost and logistics.
Village Haat: The second method of disposing surplus of the Indian farmers is to sell
their produce in the weekly village markets popularly known as ‘hat’ or in annual fairs.
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Sale in Government Mandis: Government Mandis are located in different towns and
districts which act as a hub of wholesale collection and selling of surplus produce.
Farmers have to bring their produce to these places and sell it with the help of ‘brokers’
or ‘mahajans’.
Co – operative Marketing: The fourth form of marketing is the co-operative marketing
where marketing societies are formed by farmers to sell the output collectively to take
the advantage of collective bargaining for obtaining a better price.
In India, there are several central government organisations, who are involved in agricultural
marketing like, Commission of Agricultural Costs and Prices, Food Corporation of India, Cotton
Corporation of India, Jute Corporation of India, etc. There are also specialised marketing bodies
for rubber, tea, coffee, tobacco, spices and vegetables.
Under the Agricultural Produce (grading and marketing) Act of 1937, more than forty primary
commodities are compulsorily graded for export and voluntarily graded for internal
consumption. Although the regulation of commodity markets is a function of state government,
the directorate of marketing and inspection provides marketing and inspection services and
financial aid down to the village level to help set up commodity grading centers in selected
markets.
Poor Storage Facility – Every year 15 to 30 per cent of the agricultural produce are damaged
either by rats or rains due to the absence of proper storage facilities. Thus, the farmers are
forced to sell their surplus produce just after harvests at a very low and un-remunerative price.
Distress Sale – Most of the Indian farmers are very poor and thus have no capacity to wait for
better price of his produce in the absence of proper credit facilities. Farmers often have to go
for even distress sale of their output to the village moneylenders-cum-traders at a very poor
price.
Lack of Connectivity – In the absence of proper road transportation facilities in the rural areas,
Indian farmers cannot reach nearby mandis to sell their produce at a fair price. Thus, they
prefer to sell their produce at the village markets itself.
Unfavourable conditions in Mandis – In the mandis, the farmers have to wait for disposing
their produce for which there is no storage facilities. Thus, the farmers will have to lake help of
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the middleman or dalal who lake away a major share of the profit, and finalizes the deal either
in his favour or in favour of arhatiya or wholesalers.
Unregulated markets – There are huge number of unregulated markets which adopt various
malpractices. Prevalence of false weights and measures and lack of grading and standardization
of products in village markets in India are always going against the interest of ignorant, small
and poor farmers.
Lack of Grading and Standardisation –There is no proper grading and standardization of farm
produce. This leads to Dhara (heap) sales in which all qualities of produce are sold in one
common lot. Farmer is unable to get better price for better produce and this implies that there
are no incentives to use better farm inputs and produce better varieties.
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APMC Mandi
Union Government had prepared a Model APMC Act in 2003. As of 2014 some 16 states have
adopted this Model Act. The salient features of this act are as follows:
Under the existing acts, the markets are setup only at the initiative of State Governments. The
2003 act provides that Legal persons (such as individuals, organizations and companies),
growers and local authorities are permitted to apply for the establishment of new markets for
agricultural produce in any area. Further, in a market area, more than one market can be
established by private persons, farmers and consumers.
Note: Farmers are not forced to sell their produce through existing markets established by
APMC.
The act makes separate provision for notification of ‘Special Markets’ or ‘Special Commodities
Markets’ in any market area for specified agricultural commodities to be operated in addition
to existing markets.
Market Committees:
The act makes separate provision for notification of ‘Special Markets’ or ‘Special Commodities
Markets’ in any market area for specified agricultural commodities to be operated in addition
to existing markets.
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Contract Farming:
A new chapter has been added in Model APMC Act to promote Contract farming. Contract
farming is an agreement of a marketing firm with the producers at predetermined price. The
company provides production support to get desired quality of products.
The provisions under this chapter enable direct sale of farm produce to contract farming
sponsor from farmers’ field without the necessity of routing it through notified markets.
Direct marketing also allows the farmer to undertake sorting, grading and quality marking at
the farm gate itself. It helps him to obviate the regulated markets which are not necessarily
equipped with all required services and facilities affecting the marketing efficiency adversely.
In India, the direct marketing model This model has been experimented in Punjab and Haryana
via the Apni Mandis , in Andhra Pradesh via the Rythu Bazar and in Tamil Nadu via the Uzhavar
Santhaigal .
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2. Improvement in Warehousing and Storage facility:
Storage is an important marketing function, which involves holding and preserving goods from
the time they are produced until they are needed for consumption.
The storage of goods, therefore, from the time of production to the time of
consumption, ensures a continuous flow of goods in the market.
Some of the goods e.g., woolen garments, have a seasonal demand. To cope with this
demand, production on a continuous basis and storage become necessary;
Storage is necessary for some period for performance of other marketing functions.
Storage provides employment and income through price advantages.
Warehousing:
Warehouses are scientific storage structures especially constructed for the protection of the
quantity and quality of stored products.
Warehouse in Nasik
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Importance
Scientific storage
The product is protected against quantitative and qualitative losses by the use of such methods
of preservation as are necessary.
Financing
Warehouses meet the financial needs of the person who stores the product. Nationalized banks
advance credit on the security of the warehouse receipt issued for the stored products to the
extent of 75 to 80% of their value.
Price Stabilization
Market Intelligence
Warehouses also offer the facility of market information to persons who hold their produce in
them.
Note: The warehouses (CWC and SWCs) work under the respective Warehousing Acts passed by
the Central or State Govt.
Types of warehouse
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i. The importer of goods is saved from the botheration of paying customs duty all at one
time because he can take delivery of the goods in parts.
ii. The operation necessary for the maintenance of the quality of goods - spraying and
dusting, are done regularly.
iii. Entrepot trade (re-export of imported goods) becomes possible.
a. General Warehouses: These are ordinary warehouses used for storage of most of
foodgrains, fertilizers, etc.
b. Special Commodity Warehouses: These are warehouses, which are specially constructed
for the storage of specific commodities like cotton, tobacco, wool and petroleum
products.
c. Refrigerated Warehouses: These are warehouses in which temperature is maintained as
per requirements and are meant for such perishable commodities as vegetables, fruits,
fish, eggs and meat.
Warehousing in India
This corporation was established as a statutory body in New Delhi on 2nd March 1957. The
Central Warehousing Corporation provides safe and reliable storage facilities for about 120
agricultural and industrial commodities.
Separate warehousing corporations were also set up in different States of the Indian Union. The
areas of operation of the State Warehousing Corporations are centres of district importance.
The total share capital of the State Warehousing Corporations is contributed equally by the
concerned State Govt. and the Central Warehousing Corporation.
Apart from CWC and SWCs, the Food Corporation of India has also created storage facilities.
The Food Corporation of India is the single largest agency which has a capacity of 26.62 million
tonnes.
3. Connectivity:
Many Schemes have been started by the Government of India to provide all weather road
connectivity to rural hinterland. This will connect the farming areas with urban markets.
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AGMARK is a certification mark employed on agricultural products in India, assuring that they
conform to a set of standards approved by the Directorate of Marketing and Inspection, an
agency of the Government of India. The AGMARK is legally enforced in India by the Agricultural
Produce (Grading and Marking) Act of 1937 (and ammended in 1986). The
present AGMARK standards cover quality guidelines for 205 different commodities spanning a
variety of Pulses, Cereals, Essential Oils, Vegetable Oils, Fruits & Vegetables, and semi-
processed products like Vermicelli.
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Agmark Laboratories
The Agmark certification is employed through fully state-owned Agmark laboratories located
across the nation which act as testing and certifying centers. In addition to the Central AGMARK
Laboratory (CAL) in Nagpur, there are Regional AGMARK Laboratories (RALs) in 11 nodal cities
(Mumbai, New-Delhi, Chennai, Kolkata, Kanpur, Kochi, Guntur, Amritsar, Jaipur, Rajkot, and
Bhopal). Each of the regional laboratories is equipped with and specializes in the testing of
products of regional significance. Hence the product range that could be tested varies across
the centers.
5. Fair Pricing:
Crops Covered –
Cereals (7) - paddy, wheat, barley, jowar, bajra, maize and ragi
Pulses (5) - gram, arhar/tur, moong, urad and lentil
Oilseeds (8) - groundnut, rapeseed/mustard, toria, soyabean, sunflower seed, sesamum,
safflower seed and nigerseed
Copra
De-husked coconut
Raw cotton
Raw jute
Sugarcane (Fair and remunerative price)
Virginia flu cured (VFC) tobacco
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The Commission for Agricultural Costs & Prices (CACP) is an attached office of the Ministry of
Agriculture and Farmers Welfare, Government of India. It came into existence in January 1965.
National Agriculture Market (NAM) is a pan-India electronic trading portal which networks the
existing APMC mandis to create a unified national market for agricultural commodities.
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The NAM Portal provides a single window service for all APMC related information and services.
This includes commodity arrivals & prices, buy & sell trade offers, provision to respond to trade
offers, among other services. While material flow (agriculture produce) continue to happen
through mandis, an online market reduces transaction costs and information asymmetry.
The fragmentation of markets, even within the State, hinders free flow of agri commodities
from one market area to another and multiple handling of agri-produce and multiple levels of
mandi charges ends up escalating the prices for the consumers without commensurate benefit
to the farmer.
NAM addresses these challenges by creating a unified market through online trading platform,
both, at State and National level and promotes uniformity, streamlining of procedures across
the integrated markets, removes information asymmetry between buyers and sellers and
promotes real time price discovery, based on actual demand and supply, promotes
transparency in auction process, and access to a nationwide market for the farmer, with prices
commensurate with quality of his produce and online payment and availability of better quality
produce and at more reasonable prices to the consumer.
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Objectives of NAM
A national e-market platform for transparent sale transactions and price discovery
initially in regulated markets.
Liberal licensing of traders / buyers and commission agents by State authorities without
any pre-condition of physical presence or possession of shop /premises in the market
yard.
One license for a trader valid across all markets in the State.
Harmonisation of quality standards of agricultural produce and provision for assaying
(quality testing) infrastructure in every market to enable informed bidding by buyers.
Single point levy of market fees, i.e on the first wholesale purchase from the farmer.
Provision of Soil Testing Laboratories in/ or near the selected mandi to facilitate visiting
farmers to access this facility in the mandi itself.
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