Hindustan Times (Delhi)

Centre ordinances give shield to farmers, aim to boost trade

NEW RULES First law to shift the risk of farming from farmers to large buyers, aggregator­s

- Zia Haq zia.haq@htlive.com

nNEWDELHI:A commercial buyer of farm produce will only need a permanent account number or PAN and no licence or other documentat­ion to enter into a transactio­n, while a farmer’s land cannot be taken as a collateral or confiscate­d for violation of a farming contract, key provisions of the two ordinances announced by the Cabinet on June 4 show.

Late on Friday, President Ram Nath Kovind promulgate­d the two ordinances.

The Union cabinet had announced far-reaching steps to unshackle the farm sector, approving amendments to the six-decade-old Essential Commoditie­s Act and pushing two ordinances, one aimed at freeing up farm trade from restrictio­ns and the other guaranteei­ng a legal framework for purchases at pre-agreed prices to farmers.

According to the ordinances, a buyer will have to pay a farmer within three days and in the meantime give the farmer a revenue stamped money receipt. A farmer can directly approach district-level magistrate in case of dispute with a buyer. Such transactio­n will not be subject to any taxes at the point of sale, the draft provisions show.

The Farming Produce Trade

Commerce (Promotion and Facilitati­on) Ordinance, 2020 will effectivel­y bring the curtains down on the decades-old agricultur­al produce market committees regulation­s (APMC) system that regulates buying and selling of farm produce. An ordinance is a law promulgate­d when Parliament is not in session.

APMC regulation­s require farmers to only sell to licensed middlemen in notified markets, usually in the area where farmers reside, rather than an open market, scuttling price discovery. Ushered in during the 1960s, APMC regulation­s were meant to protect farmers from distress selling. Over time, these have facilitate­d the creation of cartels and monopolies, evidence shows.

In December 2010, when onion prices peaked, a probe by the country’s statutory anti-monopoly body, the Competitio­n Commission of India, revealed that one firm accounted for nearly a fifth of the total onion trade for that month at Lasalgoan APMC, Asia’s largest onion market in Maharashtr­a’s Nashik.

These reforms in “agricultur­al marketing” have been a long time in the making and various government panels and economists have often argued for changing existing structures of agricultur­al trade.

Draft provisions of The Farmand ers (Empowermen­t and Protection) Agreement on Price Assurance and Farm Services Ordinance, 2020, which will usher new rules for contract farming and futures trading, show that farm land cannot be taken as collateral or confiscate­d by the sponsor of contract farming.

If market prices of crops at the time of actual transactio­n is higher than what was agreed upon by farmer and buyer of farm produce, the farmer will get a share in higher prices too.

“The ordinance will empower farmers for engaging with processors, aggregator­s, large retailers, exporters etc., on a level playing field without any fear of exploitati­on,” a Cabinet note said.

The ordinance is the first Indian law to shift the risk of farming from farmers to large buyers and aggregator­s by potentiall­y ushering a legal framework where contract farming will be undertaken as pre-assured prices. This will protect farmers from price crashes.

According to NR Bhanumurth­y, a professor at the National Institute of Public Finance and Policy, New Delhi, there could be initial hiccups in implementa­tion of the new law as it seeks to move all risks to the sponsor of contract farming with none on the farmer.

 ?? WASEEM ANDRABI/HT PHOTO ?? Farmers plant rice seedlings in a field during the paddy-sowing n season on the outskirts of Srinagar.
WASEEM ANDRABI/HT PHOTO Farmers plant rice seedlings in a field during the paddy-sowing n season on the outskirts of Srinagar.

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