BusinessLine (Chennai)

Bihar may rejoin PMFBY, but enrolment will have to wait

BIDING TIME. Gujarat, which too had quit the crop cover scheme, is yet to decide

- Prabhudatt­a Mishra New Delhi

The number of States that implement the Centre’s flagship crop insurance scheme PMFBY may jump to 22 as Jharkhand and Telangana are likely to start enrolment for the upcoming kharif season. While discussion­s with Bihar is at an advanced stage for its return, Gujarat is yet to make up its mind.

“We are hopeful of Jharkhand and Telangana to start enrolment for this kharif; Bihar may not be able to do even if it decides to rejoin as very little time is left,” said an o¨cial source. Jharkhand decided to rejoin the Pradhan Mantri Fasal Bima Yojana (PMFBY) last year while Telangana conveyed its decision this February after new government was formed.

For the kharif 2024 season, enrolment under PMFBY has started only in Himachal Pradesh

For kharif 2024, enrolment under PMFBY has started only in Himachal Pradesh even as 20 days have passed

even as 20 days have passed. The normal enrolment for kharif starts from April 1 and ends on July 31, but the period varies from State to State and at times even from crop to crop. The premium rates need to be fixed before April 1, as per guidelines, but it is not followed by States.

“PMFBY is a non-political scheme aimed at gradual shifting towards real insurance as previously it was compensati­on-based models.

Crop insurance will take more years to mature in India as farmers’ welfare remain core to the policy making in the government and benefits for small and marginal farmers are always accorded priority,” said a top o¨cial of a private insurance firm.

STAKEHOLDE­R TALKS

He also said that after West Bengal, Bihar and Andhra Pradesh introduced universal coverage, insuring all farmers by default , the

Centre is also consulting with stakeholde­rs if there is a feasibilit­y to make PMFBY universal for small and marginal farmers, owning up to 2 hectares of land.

Andhra Pradesh, Telangana and Jharkhand had quit PMFBY in 2020 while West Bengal and Bihar exited the scheme before. Punjab never implemente­d the scheme as it does not see PMFBY beneficial for the farmers amid 100 per cent irrigation, mainly from groundwate­r.

Experts said that Gujarat’s exit from the scheme points to something wrong with PMFBY as it was launched in 2016 after Narendra Modi became the Prime Minister. Unless the Centre addresses the concerns of Gujarat and ensures its return, the scheme may not be attractive, said a former top o¨cial of the Agricultur­e Ministry and added: “at the best it could be compulsion for a State without any viable alternativ­e.”

 ?? ?? THIN ON THE GROUND.
THIN ON THE GROUND.

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