Indian Agriculture
·
Mainstay of Indian Economy
·
Since independence, undergone a
change from being the sector contributing the highest share to the GDP to one
contributing the lowest share.
·
Agriculture is a state subject.
·
GDP contribution (Agriculture
and allied sector)
o
56.5 pc in 1950-51
o
15.7 pc in 2008-09 and 14.6 pc
in 2009-10. It was 19 pc in 2004-05. (2004-05 prices)
o
Agricultural GDP grew by 0.4 pc
in 2009-10 and -0.1 pc in 2008-09.
·
Employment
o
75.9 pc in 1961
o
59.9 pc in 1999-2000
o
58.2 pc in 2008-09
o
1999-2000: Number at 237.8 million
·
GCF
o
Share in total GCF 2009-10: 7.7
pc (2004-05 prices)
o
GCF as % of agricultural GDP:
2007-08 – 16.3, 2008-09(P) – 19.67, 2009-10(QE) – 20.3
o
GCF as % of total GDP: 2007-08
– 2.69, 2008-09P – 3.09, 2009-10QE – 2.97
·
Contributes to agricultural
growth and industrial demand
·
Contributed 10.59 pc of total
exports in 2009-10.
·
Due to the large number of
workforce in this sector, the growth of agriculture is a necessary condition
for inclusive growth.
·
Food grains production
o
Highest in 2008-09: 234. 47 mn
t
o
2009-10: 218.11 mn t
Agriculture and Industry
·
Agriculture as
o
Supplier of wage goods to the
industrial sector
o
Provider of raw materials
o
Consumer of agricultural
capital goods produced by industry
·
Stagnation in agriculture
o
Get data on CAGR
Land Reforms
·
Great scarcity and uneven
distribution of land
·
Focus of agricultural policies
in the initial years was on institutional changes through land reforms
·
Two objectives of land reforms
in India
o
To remove the impediments to
agriculture that arise due to the character of agrarian structure in rural
areas
o
To reduce or eliminate the
exploitation of tenants/small farmers
·
Four main areas of land reforms
in India
o
Abolition of intermediaries
(zamindars)
o
Tenancy reforms
o
Land ceilings
o
Consolidation of disparate land
holdings
·
Economic arguments for land
reforms
o
Equity
o
Small farms tend to be more
productive than large farms
o
Owner cultivated plots of land
tend to be more productive that those
under sharecropped tenancy
·
Abolition of zamindari was
successful while the other three areas of land reforms met with limited success
·
Operation Bargha. Also, LR in
Kerala
·
Regional trends in LR
·
Effect of land reforms
o
On tenants
§ Absentee landlordism declined
§ Tenancy declined. In some cases, tenants were evacuated from the
land.
§ In some cases there was a drift of tenants into landless
§ Where tenants had not been evicted, tenancy was pushed underground
o
On equity
o
On productivity
o
On agrarian power relations
·
The National Commission on
Farmers has placed the unfinished agenda in land reform first in its list of
five factors central overcome an agrarian crisis
·
Way forwards
o
Land reforms that make tenancy
legal and give well defined rights to tenants, including women, are now
necessary
Technology and Green Revolution
·
In the early 60s India faced
several crises
o
It had to fight two wars:
Pakistan and China
o
Severe drought in 1965 and 1966
o
US was using PL-480 food supply
as a means to twist India’s arms to meet US interests
·
This called for an overhaul of
the agricultural strategy and the need to be self-sufficient in food production
·
Three phases of green
revolution
o
1966-1972
o
1973-1980
o
1981-1990
·
1966-1972
o
C Subramaniam and MSS
o
1965: Agricultural Prices
Commission and Food Corporation of India set up
o
Introduction of HYV seed of
wheat from Mexico created by CIMMYT
o
Under the new agricultural
policy, the spread of HYVs was supported by public investments in fertilisers,
power, irrigation and credit
o
Food grain production shot up
§ 1966-67: 74 mt
§ 1971-72: 105 mt
o
India became nearly
self-sufficient in food grains
o
What led to the increased
production?
§ Favourable pricing policy led to adequate incentives
§ National research system proceeded to indigenise the new seeds to
tackle their shortcomings
§ Availability of inputs including canal water, fertilisers, power and
credit
§ Subsidies
§ Role of credit began to be important after 1969
·
1973-1980
o
This phase saw many challenges
o
Consecutive droughts in 1972-73
o
Oil shock
o
Production fell. Imports began
again.
o
Thereafter, government
increased fertiliser subsidies
o
Groundwater irrigation increased in
importance
o
HYV technology extended from
wheat to rice
·
1981-1990
o
1986
§ Rice prod: 63.8 mt (1964: 37)
§ Wheat prod: 47 mt (1964: 12 mt)
o
Even when the ‘worst drought of
the century’ struck in 1987, food needs could be adequately met due to buffer
stocks
o
HYV technology spread eastward
to states like West Bengal and Bihar
o
The impact of HYV technology
had started to plateau however
o
Input subsidies kept on
increasing
o
1991: Input subsidy was 7.2 pc
of agricultural GDP
·
What was the impact of highly
regulated policies on agriculture?
o
There were barriers on pricing,
movement and private trading of agricultural produce
o
The external sector was
burdened with various tariff and non-tariff barriers to agricultural trade
flows
o
The overvalued rupee produced
an anti-export environment for agriculture
o
High protection to industry
produced high industrial prices and adverse terms of trade for agriculture,
reducing the relative profitability of the primary sector
·
What was the aim of
agricultural pricing in pre-reform era?
o
Ensure inexpensive food for
consumers
o
Protect farmers’ incomes from
price fluctuations
o
Keep the balance of payments in
check
·
Agriculture in post-reform era
o
Impact: 1. Growth in PCI led to
an increase in food demand and also diversification. 2. Terms of trade between agricultural and
industrial prices improved in favour of agriculture
o
Increased profitability has led
to increase in private investments which are now double the public investment
in agriculture.
o
Growth rates
§ 1980s: 3 pc
§ 1990s:
§ 2000s:
§ Tenth Plan: 2.47 pc (as against 7.77 pc of overall economic growth)
o
This has however not translated
into reduction of poverty
o
There has been an increase in
both urban and rural inequality
·
Deceleration in agricultural
growth
o
Declined during 90s
o
Deceleration in the growth of
area, production and yield
o
Food production of Rabi crops
has off late equalled the Kharif crops. This has to an extent reduced the over
dependence on monsoon and imparted some stability to agricultural production
o
Area-wise, the deceleration was
more in case of the Indo-Gangetic region
·
The instability in agricultural
growth is more in states with high
percentage of rain-fed areas
·
Acreage: declining trend in
most crops during the period 1995-96 to 2004-05
·
Productivity: sharp decline
(1995-2005). Healthy performance of cotton and maize though
Major factors affecting growth potential
·
Lack of long term policy
perspective
o
No long term strategy for
agricultural development
o
National Agricultural Policy
was announced only in the year 2000
o
Sectoral priority to industry
from the second FYP
o
Weaknesses of policies followed
for agricultural development
§ Policies provided little incentives for the farmers as the prices
were depressed and the sector was disprotected vis a vis other sectors of the
economy
§ Inward-looking policies
§ Excessive price based focus than non-price factors like water,
infrastructure, R&D, extension services etc
·
Investment in Agriculture and
Subsidies
o
There have been cutbacks in
agricultural investment and extension, but not in subsidies
o
Agricultural subsidy as pc of
GDP:
o
Public investment in
agriculture declined from 4 pc of agriculture GDP in 1976-1980 to
o
Subsidies on fertiliser, power
and irrigation have contributed to soil degradation
o
It is important to reduce
subsidies and increase public investment in crucial areas such as soil
amelioration, watershed development,
groundwater recharge, surface irrigation and other infrastructure
o
Public Sector GCF in
agriculture stood at less than Rs 50 bn at 1993-94 prices
o
It is imperative to reduce
these subsidies for stepping up public investment in agriculture
o
After 2003, the investments
have started to increase. In 2006-07 public sector GCF was 3.7 pc of
agricultural GDP and total GCF was 12.5
pc of agricultural GDP
o
Three areas should get priority
in public investments
§ Rural roads
§ Electricity
§ Irrigation projects
§ <all three of them are under Bharat Nirman project>
o
Complimentarity between public
and private sector capital formation in agricultural sector. Public sector can
create infrastructure while the private investment is essential for short term
asset building mainly in the areas of mechanisation, ground levelling, private
irrigation etc
·
Lagging research and
development efforts
o
After the green revolution,
there has been no major breakthrough in agricultural research. GM is a
promising area but its safety has not yet been conclusively established.
o
Poor productivity in India
compared to other countries and even compared to world average
o
India, however, has the largest
public agricultural research establishment in the world. ICAR and agricultural
universities
o
India spends only 0.3 pc of
agricultural GDP for research as compared to 0.7 pc in other developing
countries and 2-3 pc in case of developed countries.
o
There is hardly any scope for
expansion of area. Hence, productivity must increase to keep up with the
increasing demand. R&D has a lot of role to play here
o
New varieties of seeds need to
be developed suited to different regions of the country
o
The research system should be
responsive to the changing needs and circumstances
·
Technology generation and
dissemination
o
Fixed land. Hence technology
o
Focus on yield as well as
sustainable use of land
o
Focus should be on specific
requirements of each agro-climatic region
o
Ned to develop much stronger
linkages between extension and farmers
·
Rising soil degradation and over-exploitation of
groundwater
o
Around 40 pc of Indian’s total
geographical area are officially estimated as degraded
o
Soil health is deteriorating in
Punjab and Haryana
·
Degradation of natural
resources
·
Subsidies vis-a-vis investments
and farm support systems
·
Agriculture’s terms of trade
and farm price volatility
o
Ensure rapid development of
backward farm linkages
·
Summary: Need to correct the
policy bias against agriculture, make higher investments, develop new varieties
of seeds, conserve natural resources like land and water and provide incentives
to the farmers to adopt modernisation
Some Issues in Indian Agriculture
·
Low public investment
·
Halt in the modernization of
agriculture
·
Agricultural indebtedness
·
Farmer suicides
·
Agricultural imports and future
markets
Subsidies
·
Talk about bringing urea under
the Nutrient Based Subsidy (NBS) system and decontrolling its prices
·
Downsides
o
Fertilizer subsidy touched
almost 1 lakh crore in 2008-09
o
Promotes overuse of fertiliser
and thereby catalysing soil degradation
o
As a result, agricultural
production in the bread baskets of the country has stagnated, posing a threat
to the food security of the country
o
Drylands do not receive the
benefit of crores of subsidy given in fertilizers
Government Intitiatives
·
Green Revolution
·
National Policy on Agriculture,
2002
·
National Policy for Farmers,
2007
o
Major policy provisions include
provisions for asset reforms, water use efficiency, use of technology, inputs
and services like soil health, good quality seeds, credit, support for
women etc
o
Focus on millets as well
o
Agriculture during the 11th plan
·
Flagship schemes
o
Rashtriya Krishi Vikas Yojana
o
National Food Security Mission
o
National Horticulture Mission
(2005-06)
o
Integrated Scheme of Pulses,
Oilseeds and Maize
o
Technology Mission for
Integrated Development of Horticulture in North-east and Himalayan States
(2001-02)
o
National Mission for Sustainable
Agriculture
o
National Mission on Micro
Irrigation was launched in 2010 in addition to the earlier Micro Irrigation
Scheme launched in 2006
o
National Bamboo Mission
·
Avg growth of 2.03 pc against
the Plan target of 4 pc per annum.
·
For sustainable and inclusive
growth
o
Must focus on the small and
marginal farmers as well as female farmers
o
Group approach should be
adopted so that they can reap economies of scale
o
Bring technology to farmers
o
Improving efficiency of
investments
o
Diversifying while also
protecting food security concerns
o
Fostering inclusiveness through
a group approach
·
Irrigation
o
Envisages creation of an
additional potential of 16 mn ha
o
Bharat Nirman aims to bring an
additional 1 crore ha of land under
irrigation by 2012
o
Accelerated Irrigation Benefits
Programme still on
Irrigation
·
45 pc of nearly 175 mn ha of
cropped area is irrigated
·
Trends
o
Nearly trebled from 24 mn ha in
1953-64 to 75 mn ha in 1998-99
o
It accounts for the largest
part of total investments in the agricultural sector
o
Importance of ground water as
an irrigation source has also increased
considerably
·
Uneven access
o
Inter-regional variance
o
Inequality in access within the
farming population
·
Areas of concern
o
Depletion of ground water
o
Environmental concerns
o
Costs
·
Steps to take
o
Improving water use efficiency
o
Water governance
o
Economic incentives for
efficient use
·
Govt Schemes
o
Accelerated Irrigation Benefits
Programme was started during 1996-97. It extends assistance for the completion
of incomplete irrigation schemes
o
·
In 11th FYP – refer
previous section
·
Way Forward
·
Second green revolution (?)
·
Relook at all the issues
offering forward and backward linkages in the agricultural production cycle
·
Focus on oilseeds, pulses and
coarse cereals
·
Coarse cereals: high nutrition,
can be grown in dry areas, enhance fertility of soil in rotation
·
PDS should be reformed: coarse
cereals should also be provided through PDS
·
Timely availability of credit
at affordable costs
·
Wider extension of insurance
facilities to the farm sector
·
Water and irrigation infrastructure
·
Drip irrigation
·
Organic manures should be
popularized and their commercial production encouraged
·
Educate farmers about
technology and agricultural techniques
·
Food Security
·
Food security should also
incorporate nutritional security. This requires emphasising the increase in production
of pulses, fruits, vegetables, poultry and meat.
·
Interpreted broadly
·
Includes nutritional security
which particularly incorporates maternal health and infant health due to the
involvement of the nutritional aspect
·
Also covers employment security
(?)
·
Affordability, accessibility
and availability
·
Food security seeks to address
all the three dimensions of hunger: chronic, hidden and transient
·
It also is the first step
towards inclusive development
Public Distribution System
·
High procurement prices
Irrigation
·
The total irrigation potential
in the country has increased from 81.1 mn hectares in 1991-92 to 108.2 mn
hectares in March 2010.
·
1996-97: Accelerated Irrigation
Benefit Programme initiated
·
Reservoir Storage Capacity: 151.77
billion cubic metres
Agricultural Pricing
·
To ensure
o
Remunerative prices to growers
o
Encouraging higher investment
and production
o
Safeguard the interest of
consumers by making sure that adequate supplies are available
·
It also seeks to evolve a balanced
and integrated price structure in the perspective of the overall needs of the
economy
Investment in Agriculture
·
FAO estimates that global
agricultural production needs to grow 70 pc by 2050 in order to meet projected
food demand
·
Hence investment should grow by
a whopping 50 pc
·
In India, public investment in
agriculture has witnessed a steady decline from the 6th FYP onwards
·
Share of investment in
agriculture has been between 8-10 pc
·
Most of this has gone into
current expenditure in the form of increased output and input subsidies
·
Though private sector
investment has been increasing, it has not proved to be enough
·
Decreased public spending in
creation of supporting infrastructure in rural areas has discouraged private
investment in this sector
·
Some of the measures could be
o
Investment in general service
like R&D, education, marketing and rural infrastructure
o
Increased investment in rainfed
areas
o
Private sector participation
o
Increased investment for
sustainable development
WTO and Agriculture
·
Uruguay Round multilateral
trade negotiations were concluded after 7 years of negotiation in December 1993
·
The WTO Agreement on
Agriculture was one of the main agreements which was negotiated
·
Agreement on Agriculture
contains provisions in three broad areas of agriculture
o
Market Access
o
Domestic Support
o
Export Subsidies
·
Market Access
o
This is the most important
aspect of the negotiation because all countries restrict market access while
only few have export subsidies and domestic support
o
This includes tariffication,
tariff reduction and access opportunities
o
Tariffication means that all
NTTBs should be withdrawn (such as quotas, minimum export prices etc)
o
Adopts a single approach using
a tiered formula
o
Single approach: everyone
except LDCs have to contribute by improving market access for all products
o
Sensitive products: All
countries can list some sensitive products and are allowed flexibility in the
way these products are treated, although even sensitive products have to see
‘substantial improvements’ in market access.
o
Special and differential
treatment
§ Purpose: for rural development, food security and livelihood
security
§ Specifically, special treatment is to be given to developing
countries in ‘all elements of the negotiation', including ‘lesser’ commitments in
the formula and long implementation period
§ Special products: developing countries will be given additional
flexibility for products that are specially important for their food security,
livelihood security and rural development.
§ Special Safeguard Mechanisms: is intended to provide contingent
protection to poor farmers in developing countries from negative shocks to
import prices or from surges in imports. [Safeguards are contingency
restrictions on imports taken temporarily to deal with special circumstances
such as a sudden surge in imports. AoA has special provisions on safeguards. In
agriculture safeguards, (unlike normal safeguards) can be triggered
automatically when import volumes rise above a certain level or if prices fall
below a certain level; and it is not necessary to demonstrate that serious
injury is being caused to the domestic industry]
o
AoA requires (from 1995)
§ 36% average reduction by developed countries, with a minimum per
tariff line reduction of 15% over six years
§ 24% average reduction by developing countries with a minimum per tariff line reduction of 10% over
ten years
·
Domestic Support (subsidies)
o
AoA structures domestic support
into three categories
§ Green Box
§ Amber Box
§ Blue Box
o
Green Box
§ Non (or minimal) trade distorting subsidies
§ They have to be government funded and must not involve price support
§ They tend to be programmes that are not targeted at particular
products and include direct income supports for farmers that are not related to
current production levels or prices. They also include environmental protection
and regional developmental programmes. These subsidies are therefore allowed
without limits
o
Amber Box
§ All domestic support measures considered production and trade fall
into the amber box
§ These include measures to support prices, or subsidies directly
related to production quantities
§ These supports are subject to limits which are allowed: 5% of total
production for developed countries, 10% for developing countries
§ Reduction commitments are expressed in terms of a “Total Aggregate
Measurement of Support” (Total AMS)
o
Blue Box
§ This is the “amber box with conditions” – conditions designed to
reduce distortion
§ Any support that would normally be in the amber box, is placed in
the blue box if the support also required farmers to limit production
§ At present there are no limits on spending on blue box subsidies.
·
Export subsidies
o
Developed countries are
required to reduce their export subsidy by 36% (by value) or 21% (by volume)
over the six years
o
For developing countries the %
cuts are 24% (by value) or 14% (by volume) over 10 years
·
India’s commitment
o
As India was maintaining QRs
due to balance of payments reasons (which is a GATT consistent measure), it did
not have to undertake any commitments in regard to market access
·
In India, exporters of
agricultural commodities do not get any direct subsidy. Indirect subsidies are
given
Food Processing
·
Food processing is a large
sector that covers activities such as agriculture, horticulture, plantation,
animal husbandry and fisheries
·
Ministry of Food Processing
indicated the following segments within the Food Processing industry:
o
Dairy, fruits and vegetable
processing
o
Grain processing
o
Meat and poultry processing
o
Fisheries
o
Consumer foods including
packaged foods, beverages and packaged drinking water
·
Industry is large and has grown
after 1991. However, of the country’s total agriculture and food produce, only
2 per cent is processed.
·
FP has 9% share in
manufacturing
·
Structure
o
42 pc: Unorganised
o
33 pc: SSI
o
25 pc: Organised
Constraints
& Drivers of Growth
Changing lifestyles, food habits, organized food retail and urbanization are the key factors for processed foods in India, these are post-liberalization trends and they give boost to the sector.
There has been a notable change in consumption pattern in India. Unlike earlier, now the share and growth rates for fruits, vegetables, meats and dairy have gone higher compared to cereals and pulses. Such a shift implies a need to diversify the food production base to match the changing consumption preferences.
Also in developed countries it has been observed that there has been a shift from carbohydrate staple to animal sources and sugar. Going by this pattern, in future, there will be demand for prepared meals, snack foods and convenience foods and further on the demand would shift towards functional, organic and diet foods.
Some of the key constraints identified by the food processing industry include:
- Poor infrastructure in terms of cold storage,
warehousing, etc
- Inadequate quality control and testing
infrastructure
- Inefficient supply chain and involvement of
middlemen
- High transportation and inventory carrying
cost
- Affordability, cultural and regional
preference of fresh food
- High taxation
- High packaging cost
In
terms of policy support, the ministry of food processing has taken the
following initiatives:
- Formulation of the National Food Processing
Policy
- Complete de-licensing, excluding for alcoholic
beverages
- Declared as priority sector for lending in
1999
- 100% FDI on automatic route
- Excise duty waived on fruits and vegetables
processing from 2000 – 01
- Income tax holiday for fruits and vegetables
processing from 2004 – 05
- Customs duty reduced on freezer van from 20%
to 10% from 2005 – 06
- Implementation of Fruit Products Order
- Implementation of Meat Food Products Order
- Enactment of FSS Bill 2005
- Food Safety and Standards Bill, 2005
- Mega Food Parks
Apart
from these initiatives, the Centre has requested state Governments to undertake
the following reforms:
- Amendment to the APMC Act
- Lowering of VAT rates
- Declaring the industry as seasonal
- Integrate the promotional structure
Plan
Schemes
During
the 10th Plan, the Ministry implemented Plan schemes for Technology
Upgradation/Modernization/Establishment of Food Processing Industries,
Infrastructure Development, Human Resource Development, Quality Assurance,
R&D and other promotional activities.
In
the 11th Plan, it has been proposed to continue assistance
to the above schemes with higher levels of assistance. In the 11th Plan, the Ministry proposes to launch
a revamped Infrastructure Scheme under which it will promote setting up of Mega Food Parks, cold chain infrastructure, value added centres and packaging centres.
The Mega Food Park Scheme will provide backward and forward linkages as well as
reliable and sustainable supply chain. The emphasis will be on building
strong linkages with agriculture and horticulture, enhancing project
implementation capabilities, increased involvement of private sector
investments and support for creation of rural infrastructure to ensure a steady
supply of good quality agri/horticulture produce. It will provide a mechanism
to bring farmers, processors and retailers together and link agricultural
production to the market so as to ensure maximization of value addition,
minimize wastages and improve farmers' income. The Mega Food Park would be a
well-defined agri/horticultural-processing zone containing state of the art
processing facilities with support infrastructure and well established supply
chain. The primary
objective of the proposed scheme is to facilitate establishment of integrated
value chain, with processing at the core and supported by requisite forward and
backward linkages. It is envisaged that the implementation of the
projects would be assisted by professional Project Management Agencies (PMA)
from concept to commissioning. In 11th Plan it is planned to support
establishment of thirty (30) Mega Food
Parks in various parts of the country.
Vision
2015 on Food Processing Industries
A
vision, strategy and action plan has also been finalized for giving boost to
growth of food processing sector. The objective is to increase level of processing of perishable food
from 6% to 20%, value addition from 20% to 35% and share in global food trade
from 1.6% to 3%. The level of processing for fruits and vegetables is
envisaged to increase from the present 2.2% to 10% and 15% in 2010 and 2015
respectively. The Cabinet has approved the integrated strategy for promotion of
agri-business and vision, strategy and action plan for the Food Processing
Sector, based on the recommendations made by the Group of Ministers (GOM).
Integrated
Food Law
An
Integrated Food Law, i.e. Food
Safety and Standards Act, 2006 was notified on 24.8.2006. The Act
enables in removing multiplicity of food laws and regulatory agencies and
provide single window to food processing sector. Ministry of Health &
Family Welfare has been designated as the nodal Ministry for administration and
implementation of the Act.
National
Institute of Food Technology Entrepreneurship & Management (NIFTEM)
The
Ministry has set up a National
Institute of Food technology Entrepreneurship & Management (NIFTEM) at
Kundli (Haryana). The Institute will function as a knowledge centre in
food processing. Certificate of Incorporation of NIFTEM as a section 25 Company
under the Companies act 1956 has been obtained.
SWOT
Analysis of Food–Processing Industry
Strengths
Strengths
- Abundant availability of raw material
- Priority sector status for agro-processing
given by the central Government
- Vast network of manufacturing facilities all
over the country
- Vast domestic market
Weaknesses
- Low availability of adequate infrastructural
facilities
- Lack of adequate quality control and testing
methods as per international standards
- Inefficient supply chain due to a large number
of intermediaries
- High requirement of working capital.
- Inadequately developed linkages between
R&D labs and industry.
- Seasonality of raw material
Opportunities
- Large crop and material base offering a vast
potential for agro processing activities
- Setting of SEZ/AEZ and food parks for
providing added incentive to develop greenfield projects
- Rising income levels and changing consumption
patterns
- Favourable demographic profile and changing
lifestyles
- Integration of development in contemporary
technologies such as electronics, material science, bio-technology etc.
offer vast scope for rapid improvement and progress
- Opening of global markets
Threats
- Affordability and cultural preferences of
fresh food
- High inventory carrying cost
- High taxation
- High packaging cost
Subsidies
Fertilizer Policy: Urea is the only fertilizer under statutory
price control. Government of India has
introduced nutrient based subsidy with effect from 1st April, 2010 in respect
of phosphatic and potassic fertilizers.
Under the policy, subsidy is based on
the nutrient (N,P,K and S) content of the
decontrolled P and K fertilizers. Price of Urea has been increased by
10% while price of other subsidized fertilizers are being maintained around
current levels. Additional subsidy on micronutrients has been introduced on
Boron and Zinc, to begin with. In order
to promote the concept of balanced use of fertilizers and to encourage use of
micronutrients, several fertilizers fortifed with Boron and Zinc have been
incorporated in the Fertilizer (Control) Order, 1985.
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