Agriculture: Productivity, Land Reforms, Finance, Marketing, Food Security, Food Processing
Key facts
- Agriculture's Share in India's Economy — Contributes approximately 17–18% of India's GDP (2024–25)
- Green Revolution and Foodgrain Growth — Green Revolution (1960s–70s) led by M.S. Swaminathan using HYV seeds from CIMMYT (Norman Borlaug)
- Land Reforms Post-Independence — Four components: zamindari abolition (1950s), tenancy reforms, land ceiling legislation, redistribution to landless
- Minimum Support Price (MSP) — Government-guaranteed floor price for 23 agricultural commodities, recommended by CACP
- PM Fasal Bima Yojana (PMFBY) — Launched February 2016; premium rates: 2% for Kharif, 1.5% for Rabi, 5% for commercial crops
Key Points at a Glance
- 1
Agriculture's Share in India's Economy
- Contributes approximately 17–18% of India's GDP (2024–25)
- Employs about 45.5% of the workforce (PLFS 2023–24)
- Backbone of rural livelihoods despite declining from 50%+ GDP share at independence
- 2
Green Revolution and Foodgrain Growth
- Green Revolution (1960s–70s) led by M.S. Swaminathan using HYV seeds from CIMMYT (Norman Borlaug)
- Transformed India from food-deficit to food-surplus nation
- Wheat: 11 MT (1965–66) → 107.7 MT (2023–24); total foodgrain: 328.8 MT (2023–24)
- 3
Land Reforms Post-Independence
- Four components: zamindari abolition (1950s), tenancy reforms, land ceiling legislation, redistribution to landless
- Over 20 million acres redistributed to landless farmers
- Reforms remained incomplete due to benami holdings, exemptions, and poor implementation
- 4
Minimum Support Price (MSP)
- Government-guaranteed floor price for 23 agricultural commodities, recommended by CACP
- 2024–25 rates: common paddy ₹2,300/quintal, wheat ₹2,275/quintal
- Based on C2+50% formula recommended by Swaminathan Commission
- 5
PM Fasal Bima Yojana (PMFBY)
- Launched February 2016; premium rates: 2% for Kharif, 1.5% for Rabi, 5% for commercial crops
- Government pays the balance premium beyond farmer's contribution
- Claims of ₹1.64 lakh crore paid to farmers up to 2023–24
- 6
National Food Security Act (NFSA) 2013
- Covers 81.35 crore people (67% of India's population) — 75% rural + 50% urban
- Entitlement: 5 kg grains/person/month at subsidised prices (rice ₹3/kg, wheat ₹2/kg, coarse grains ₹1/kg)
- PMGKAY provides free grains — merged into NFSA from January 2024 for 5 years
- 7
Agricultural Credit and NABARD
- Institutional credit to agriculture reached ₹20 lakh crore in 2022–23
- NABARD (est. 1982) is apex body for agricultural and rural credit
- Kisan Credit Card (KCC) provides short-term crop loans at 4% interest (with interest subvention)
- 8
Agricultural Marketing Reforms
- e-NAM (launched April 2016): online trading platform connecting 1,361 mandis across 23 states/UTs (by 2024)
- APMC reforms aim to break mandis' monopoly over agricultural trade
- Model APLM Act 2017 allows private markets alongside regulated mandis
- 9
PM Kisan Sampada Yojana (PMKSY)
- Umbrella scheme for food processing under Ministry of Food Processing Industries (MoFPI)
- Sanctioned projects creating 36.8 lakh MT additional processing capacity by 2024
- Generated 7.8 lakh direct/indirect jobs; India's food processing sector is 5th largest globally
- 10
PM-KISAN Income Support
- Launched December 2018; provides ₹6,000/year in three equal instalments via DBT
- By 2025, 9.3 crore farmers are benefiting
- Over ₹3.24 lakh crore disbursed cumulatively
- 11
Agricultural Productivity Challenges
- India's yield/ha is below world average in most crops: wheat ~3.6 t/ha (vs UK 8+), rice ~2.7 t/ha (vs China 7+)
- Key causes: fragmented landholdings (average 1.08 ha), inadequate irrigation, low seed replacement rate
- Post-harvest losses: 15–30% of production due to poor storage, cold chain, and transport
- 12
White Revolution and Allied Sectors
- Operation Flood (1970–1996) made India the world's largest milk producer — 239 MT milk (2023–24)
- Blue Revolution (fisheries): India is the 2nd largest fish producer globally
- PM Matsya Sampada Yojana (2020, ₹20,050 crore) targets doubling fish exports by 2025
Why does agriculture matter for RAS Paper I?
Agriculture matters for RAS Paper I because it sits inside the economy unit, connects directly with Rajasthan's rural economy, and repeatedly produces short-note, scheme, and analytical questions in Mains. According to the RPSC RAS Main Examination syllabus, Paper I is a 200-mark General Knowledge and General Studies paper that includes agriculture under Unit II.
Agriculture is the most consistently examined topic in Paper I, Unit 2 — appearing in all 5 exams between 2013 and 2023, with an average of 6.0 marks/year. In 2023 alone, it commanded 15 marks across two questions (PM Fasal Bima Yojana at 10 marks, PM Kisan Sampada Yojana at 5 marks). Topic 23 covers India-level agriculture (Topic 33 covers Rajasthan specifically).
India's Agricultural Paradox
India presents a striking paradox in agriculture:
- World's largest producer of milk, pulses, and spices
- Second-largest wheat and rice producer globally
- Yet millions of farmers remain in distress due to low productivity, market failures, price volatility, and debt
The core challenge is transforming agricultural growth into agricultural development — raising farmer incomes, not just output.
What RPSC 2026 Will Test
The exam will likely focus on:
- PM-KISAN and PMFBY — schemes and impact data
- Food processing policy — PMKSY components and PLI scheme
- Agricultural marketing reforms — e-NAM and APMC
- National Food Security Act — coverage and entitlements
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PREDICTED Predicted RAS Questions
Based on PYQ trends and 2026 syllabus analysis
1 5M What is PM Fasal Bima Yojana (PMFBY)? State its key features.
Model Answer
PM Fasal Bima Yojana (PMFBY), launched February 2016, is India's flagship crop insurance scheme. Farmers pay low premiums: 2% for Kharif crops, 1.5% for Rabi crops, 5% for commercial/horticultural crops; the government subsidises the balance. Claims of ₹1.64 lakh crore paid to farmers by 2023–24. It covers crop loss from natural disasters, pests, and weather-related risks.
~50 words • 5 marks
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