Why in news?
The Ministry of Agriculture recently released a draft Model Contract Farming Act, 2018.
What is contract farming?
- Under this, agricultural production (including livestock and poultry) can be carried out based on a pre-harvest agreement.
- The contract would be between buyers (such as food processing units and exporters), and producers (farmers or farmer organisations).
- Accordingly, the producer can sell the agricultural produce at a specific price in the future to the buyer as per the agreement.
- It reduces the risks of fluctuating market price and demand for the producer and non-availability of quality produce for the buyer.
How is the existing regulatory structure?
- Provisions - Currently, contract farming requires registration with the Agricultural Produce Marketing Committee (APMC) in few states.
- Consequently, the APMCs can also resolve disputes arising out of these contracts.
- Further, market fees and levies are paid to the APMC to undertake contract farming.
- Concerns - The market fees and other levies are paid to the APMC when no services such as market facilities and infrastructure are rendered by them.
- There are other concerns relating to stockholding limits and poor publicity of the benefits among the farmers.
- Model APMC Act - The Model APMC Act, 2003 provided for contract farming.
- This was meant for the states, to use as reference while enacting their respective laws.
- 20 states have amended their APMC Acts; however, the procedures for registration and recording of agreements vary across states.
- Also, only 14 states have actually notified rules related to contract farming, as of October 2016.
What are the key provisions of the present Act?
- The draft Model Act seeks to create a regulatory and policy framework exclusively for contract farming.
- Based on this, the states can enact their own laws, as contracts fall under the Concurrent List.
- Authority - The Act seeks to bring contract farming outside the ambit of the state APMCs.
- Accordingly, buyers need not pay market fee and commission charges to APMCs.
- It provides for a state-level Contract Farming (Promotion and Facilitation) Authority to ensure implementation.
- Functions of the Authority include:
- levying and collecting facilitation fees
- disposing appeals related to disputes under the draft Model Act
- publicising contract farming
- Further, the sale and purchase is out of the ambit of regulation of the respective state/UT Agricultural Marketing Act.
- Support - As per the Act, the producer can get support from the buyer for improving production through inputs.
- It may include that on technology, pre-harvest and post-harvest infrastructure, etc as per the agreement.
- However, the rights or title ownership of the producer’s land cannot be transferred to the buyer.
- Also, the buyer cannot raise a permanent structure on the producer’s land.
- Registration - Registering and Agreement Recording Committee will be set up at the district, taluka or block levels.
- It will consist of officials from departments such as agriculture, animal husbandry, marketing, and rural development.
- The Act specifies that every agreement should be registered with this Committee.
- Disputes - The draft Model Act offers ways for resolving any dispute arising between a producer and a buyer.
- They are:
- negotiation or conciliation for a mutually acceptable solution
- referring the dispute to a dispute settlement officer designated by the state government
- appealing to the Contract Farming (Promotion and Facilitation) Authority if not satisfied by the decision of the dispute settlement officer
- Stockholdings limits - The existing provisions of stockholding limits on contracted produce discourage buyers to enter into contracts.
- Under the draft Model Act, stockholding limits will not be applicable on produce purchased under contract farming.
What are the concerns?
- Given the states' lethargic response for the model APMC Act, the implementation of the model law on contract farming, even if passed by the states, is uncertain.
- It allows companies to enforce price cuts or reject the produce on the plea of inferior quality.
- But the quality parameters stipulated by the companies are often hard to meet.
- The restrictive provisions in the model act thus need a reassessment for balancing the interests of farmers and businesses.
Source: PRS India