Budget 2018: PM Narendra Modi trains sight on farmers before election battle
The government will increase the minimum support price for monsoon-sown crops such as rice, soybeans, cotton and pulses, said Finance Minister Arun Jaitley.

India will boost farmers’ returns by increasing purchase prices for crops by more than 50 percent of the output cost, a move aimed at fulfilling Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s promise of doubling farm incomes by 2022.
The government will increase the minimum support price for monsoon-sown crops such as rice, soybeans, cotton and pulses, said Finance Minister Arun Jaitley, who presented the government’s budget in parliament for the financial year beginning April 1. The announcement meets the ruling party’s pledge on farm incomes in its 2014 poll manifesto.
Farmers are agitated over falling commodity prices and high debt levels. Bumper harvests, boosted by a normal monsoon in 2016 after back-to-back droughts and good rain last year, have hurt prices of several crops. Depressed levels, combined with poor arrangements for government-assured purchases, triggered protests by farmers at a time when Modi’s party faces as many as eight state elections this year and the national poll in 2019.
Increasing the support price is not adequate and it is more important that farmers get the full benefit, Jaitley said. If prices fall below support levels, then the government should purchase either at the support price or ensure farmers fetch the minimum level, he said.

“These measures will somewhat alleviate the stress of the farmers and help revive the rural economy which has seen a sharp slowdown in the current fiscal,” K Ravichandran, a senior vice president at ICRA Ltd., a local unit of Moody’s Investors Service, said in an email.
National Institution for Transforming India, the government’s think tank known as NITI Aayog, in consultation with federal and state governments, will make a plan to ensure farmers get adequate prices for their crops, Jaitley said.
Export Potential

About 800 million people of India’s 1.3 billion depend directly or indirectly on farming, with agriculture accounting for about 16 percent of the economy. The country is the world’s top grower of cotton and the second-biggest producer of wheat, rice and sugar.
Other measures include:
To provide 100 billion rupees for fisheries and animal husbandry infrastructure fund To develop 22,000 rural farm markets Farm credit allocation increased to 11 trillion rupees from 10 trillion Farmer-producer companies allowed 100 percent income tax deduction Allocation for food processing sector to almost double to 14 billion rupees.
The Economic Times Business News App for the Latest News in Business, Sensex, Stock Market Updates & More.
The Economic Times News App for Quarterly Results, Latest News in ITR, Business, Share Market, Live Sensex News & More.