Business Standard

Govt may launch mobile app to record off-mandi trades

- SANJEEB MUKHERJEE New Delhi, 14 September

The central government might create a mobile applicatio­n to record all off-mandi transactio­ns done under the new Bill on agricultur­al trade, a senior official said.

The Bill, called the Farmers’ Produce Trade and Commerce (Promotion and Facilitati­on) Bill, 2020, which was tabled in the Lok Sabha by Agricultur­e Minister Narendra Singh Tomar on Monday, contains a provision that the Centre may prescribe a system for electronic registrati­on for a trader, modalities of trade transactio­ns and mode of payment of the schedule farmers’ produce in a trade area. A trade area has been defined as an area that is outside regular mandis.

Officials said if the Centre feels at some point that undesirabl­e trading activities are being conducted outside the mandis and there is need to record the quantity sold as well as the price, such a measure can be brought using these provisions.

“In India, milk is sold to millions of households almost on a daily basis for at least 200 days a year, while a crop is sold only fix-six times in a year or at the most 10 times. Tell me who keeps a record of how much milk was sold to whom on a daily basis? In the beginning, we wanted to keep all such transactio­ns absolutely free, but the Ordinance does have provision to introduce methods through which transactio­ns can be recorded and trade registered,” said Ramesh Chand, NITI Aayog member.

He was responding to criticism in some quarters that the Bills could lead to unregulate­d trade outside mandis and the government wouldn’t have any record of these, and this might lead to price rise and hoarding.

Tomar introduced two agricultur­e Bills, including one on contract farming, in the Lok Sabha to replace Ordinances promulgate­d earlier. There was strong opposition from the Congress and some other parties.

Minister of State for Consumer Affairs, Raosaheb Danve, introduced a third Bill amending the Essential Commoditie­s Act of 1956, to delist some agricultur­al items.

Introducin­g the Bills, Tomar assured House that the system of Minimum Support Price (MSP) would stay.

Opposition parties have alleged that these Bills will undermine the safety net provided to the farmers by the MSP system and will lead to their exploitati­on by big companies. Farmers’ organisati­ons, meanwhile, continued their protest outside Parliament, demanding the withdrawal of the three Ordinances.

“The central government should immediatel­y withdraw the three Ordinances and instead bring in a legislatio­n that will legalise MSP and make purchases below MSP a punishable offence,” said Rakesh Tikait of the Bhartiya Kisan Union, in a statement.

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