What is the issue?
- Three agricultural Ordinances were announced recently.
- Just as all ordinances are not reforms, all reforms aren’t the ‘1991 moment’ for agriculture.
Why were the ordinances released?
- These ordinances were announced to facilitate trade in agricultural produce.
- They were historically resisted by the bureaucracy and the states.
- The ordinances were introduced rather than bills, because of,
- Unreleased frustration at repeatedly failing to change the status quo of depressed farmer livelihoods, and
- The pressure of the PMO seeking instant delivery
- Bills would require to be placed in the public domain for comments, consultations would be held with farmers and states.
What is the Farming Produce Trade and Commerce Ordinance?
- The baby has been thrown out with the bath water, specifically with the Farming Produce Trade and Commerce (Promotion and Facilitation) Ordinance 2020.
- Due to the unionisation of middlemen and their financial power, politicians of the states have been reluctant to amend the exploitative agriculture marketing laws.
- This, in turn, does not allow farmers to receive a fair price.
- But, now, an unregulated marketplace has been created where 15 crore farmers will be exposed to the skulduggery of traders.
- Rather than replicate Punjab’s successful agriculture mandi model, now states will lose revenue to even upgrade and repair rural infrastructure.
What would be the impacts of this ordinance?
- Over the time, the largest informal sector in the country will begin to get formalised and new business models will develop.
- A different breed of aggregators will create the much-needed competition to the existing monopoly of local traders.
- When farmers sell agricultural produce outside of APMC market yards, they cannot legally be charged commission on the sale of farm produce.
- To survive, the APMCs will have to standardise and rationalise their mandi fee structure and limit the commission charged by traders on sale of farmers’ produce.
What the amendment should have done?
- The amendment limited the powers and revenues of the state, and not the agriculture department itself.
- An amputation was required in the Essential Commodities Act (ECA), 1955, where a band-aid dressing has been applied.
- This amendment was supposed to allay the fears of traders emitting from the bureaucracy’s powers to arbitrarily evoke stockholding limits etc.
- The amendment’s fine print makes it ambiguous and leaves space for whimsical interpretations.
- The trader’s uncertainty is compounded by the arbitrary import-export policy decisions, which dilute the purpose of the amendment itself.
What is the Farmers Agreement Ordinance?
- Farmers (Empowerment and Protection) Agreement on Price Assurance and Farm Services Ordinance 2020 could have been simply called the contract farming ordinance.
- It tries to placate the fears of both the farmer and the contractor when they sign an agreement.
- For the farmer, the legal recourse isn’t a practical choice as the powers of the aggregators’ deep pockets cast a shadow over the redressal process.
- Likewise, the tediously stretched legal proceedings are dissuasion enough to either not seek redressal or settle for unfavourable terms.
- That produce derived from contract farming operations will not be subject to any obstructionist laws is a very good step.
What will be the impact of all these laws?
- Farmer-producer organisations and new aggregators will get a boost with these laws.
- They will become harbingers of prosperity in some small corners of the countryside.
- The union of the three ordinances appears to be a precursor to implementing the Shanta Kumar Committee recommendations.
- [The Committee recommended to dilute and dismantle FCI, MSP & PDS]
- This will push farmers from the frying into the fire.
- It may also be interpreted that the sugar industry needn’t pay farmers the central government FRP or the state government SAP price for cane.
- The way the establishment has gone about pushing these ordinances, the government has lost moral and political ground.
- The government efforts aren’t bearing fruit and the rural distress worsens.
Source: The Indian Express