Paper IPaper I · Economy

Agriculture and the Rural Economy

Agriculture's GDP and employment share, the Green Revolution (Swaminathan, Borlaug, HYV seeds) and the colour revolutions, cropping seasons (kharif, rabi, zaid) and major crops, the MSP mechanism and the CACP, the FCI and buffer stocks, the PDS and the National Food Security Act 2013, rural-credit institutions (NABARD, PACS, RRBs, KCC) and priority-sector lending, and the food-security-as-national-security angle for CAPF Paper I

CAPF wiki12 min read22 sections
At a glance
PaperPaper ISubjectEconomySyllabusIndian Polity and Economy: economic development in IndiaImportanceHigh
AgricultureGreen RevolutionMSPCacpFciFood SecurityPdsRural Credit

Flagship anchor

Agriculture contributes a relatively small and falling share of GDP but still supports the largest share of the workforce, which makes it socially and politically central (the productivity mismatch, see basics national income and growth). The Green Revolution (from the mid-1960s) made India self-sufficient in foodgrains. CAPF tests the Green Revolution facts, the colour revolutions, the cropping seasons and major crops, the Minimum Support Price (MSP) mechanism and the CACP, the FCI and buffer stocks, the PDS and the National Food Security Act, and the rural-credit institutions. These are clean recall facts. The standard references are NCERT Class XI "Indian Economic Development" (the agriculture and rural-development chapters), the Economic Survey, the Ministry of Agriculture and Farmers Welfare releases, and Ramesh Singh's "Indian Economy".

Core concept: the Green Revolution

The Green Revolution (from around 1966 to 1967) was the adoption of High-Yielding Variety (HYV) seeds, chemical fertilisers, assured irrigation, pesticides, and modern inputs, which sharply raised wheat and rice output. Key facts:

  • Associated with M. S. Swaminathan (the "Father of the Green Revolution in India") and the global work of Norman Borlaug (the dwarf wheat varieties).
  • Concentrated first in Punjab, Haryana, and western Uttar Pradesh, mainly in wheat.
  • Made India self-sufficient in foodgrains and ended dependence on food imports under arrangements such as PL-480.
  • Raised concerns about regional imbalance, groundwater depletion, soil degradation, and over-use of fertilisers.

The colour revolutions

Revolution Product Note
Green Revolution Foodgrains (wheat, rice) Swaminathan, Borlaug; from the mid-1960s
White Revolution (Operation Flood) Milk Verghese Kurien, "Milkman of India"; Amul model
Blue Revolution Fish and aquaculture Fisheries growth
Yellow Revolution Oilseeds Edible-oil self-sufficiency drive
Pink Revolution Meat and poultry Also linked to onions in some usage
Golden Revolution Horticulture, honey, fruits Diversification of farm output
Silver Revolution Eggs and poultry Poultry expansion

Cropping seasons and crops

Season Sown / harvested Main crops
Kharif Sown with the monsoon (June to July), harvested September to October Rice, maize, cotton, bajra, jowar, groundnut, tur (pulses), soybean
Rabi Sown in winter (October to December), harvested March to April Wheat, barley, mustard, gram (chana), peas
Zaid Short summer season between rabi and kharif Watermelon, muskmelon, cucumber, fodder

India is among the world's largest producers of milk, pulses, jute, rice, wheat, sugarcane, tea, and cotton.

Minimum Support Price and procurement

Minimum Support Price (MSP):

  • A price floor at which government agencies buy specified crops from farmers, to protect them from a price crash.
  • Recommended by the Commission for Agricultural Costs and Prices (CACP), a body under the Ministry of Agriculture, and announced by the Government (the Cabinet Committee on Economic Affairs).
  • Announced for around 23 crops (covering cereals, pulses, oilseeds, and some commercial crops).
  • The MSP is based on the cost of production; the Swaminathan Commission's "C2 plus 50 percent" formula is a recurring reference point in the MSP debate.

The Food Corporation of India (FCI) (set up 1965) is the main agency for procurement, storage, and the distribution of buffer stocks, especially of wheat and rice.

Food security and the PDS

  • The Public Distribution System (PDS), now the Targeted PDS (TPDS), distributes subsidised foodgrains through fair-price (ration) shops.
  • The National Food Security Act, 2013 made subsidised foodgrains a legal entitlement for about two-thirds of the population (up to 75 percent of the rural and 50 percent of the urban population), at highly subsidised prices.
  • Buffer stocks are maintained against minimum buffer-stocking norms to stabilise supply and prices (a tool against food inflation, see inflation and prices).
  • One Nation One Ration Card (ONORC) allows portability of PDS entitlements across States.

Agricultural marketing

How farm produce reaches the market is a recurring theme:

  • APMC (Agricultural Produce Market Committee): State-regulated wholesale markets (mandis) where farmers sell to licensed traders. A State subject under the Constitution.
  • e-NAM (electronic National Agriculture Market, 2016): an online trading platform linking mandis across States to create a unified national market.
  • Contract farming: an agreement between a farmer and a buyer fixing price and quantity in advance.
  • FPOs (Farmer Producer Organisations): collectives that pool small farmers' produce for better bargaining power.
  • Cold chains and warehousing: post-harvest infrastructure that reduces wastage and distress sales.

Land reforms (post-Independence)

Land reform was an early development priority, mostly a State subject:

  • Abolition of intermediaries (zamindari abolition): removing the layer between the State and the cultivator.
  • Tenancy reforms: regulating rent and giving security of tenure to tenants.
  • Land ceilings: capping the maximum holding, with surplus redistributed.
  • Consolidation of holdings: combining fragmented plots.
  • Cooperative farming and Bhoodan/Gramdan (the voluntary land-gift movement led by Vinoba Bhave). Land reforms had uneven success across States; tenancy and ceiling laws were widely evaded.

Farm sub-sectors

Sub-sector Note
Animal husbandry and dairy Milk (White Revolution); India is the world's largest milk producer
Fisheries Blue Revolution; inland and marine fisheries
Horticulture Fruits, vegetables, spices (Golden Revolution)
Allied activities Poultry, sericulture, apiculture (honey)

Static facts to memorise

Item Value or definition
Green Revolution begins Around 1966 to 1967
Father of the Indian Green Revolution M. S. Swaminathan
Global Green Revolution figure Norman Borlaug
Early Green Revolution states Punjab, Haryana, western Uttar Pradesh
White Revolution Milk, Operation Flood, Verghese Kurien
Kharif crops Rice, maize, cotton, bajra, jowar, groundnut
Rabi crops Wheat, gram, mustard, barley, peas
MSP recommended by Commission for Agricultural Costs and Prices (CACP)
MSP announced by Cabinet Committee on Economic Affairs
Number of crops under MSP Around 23
Procurement and buffer-stock agency Food Corporation of India (FCI), set up 1965
Food-security law National Food Security Act, 2013
NFSA coverage About two-thirds of the population (75 percent rural, 50 percent urban)
Apex rural-credit institution NABARD (set up 1982)
Ration-card portability One Nation One Ration Card (ONORC)

Rural credit

Source Note
NABARD National Bank for Agriculture and Rural Development; apex refinance and supervisory body (1982)
Cooperative credit societies Primary Agricultural Credit Societies (PACS) at the village level; a three-tier cooperative structure
Regional Rural Banks (RRBs) Set up under the RRB Act 1976 to serve rural borrowers
Commercial banks Provide a large share of farm credit; priority-sector lending norms apply
Kisan Credit Card (KCC) Short-term credit for crop and allied needs at concessional interest

Priority Sector Lending (PSL) norms require banks to lend a set share of credit (currently 40 percent of adjusted net bank credit for domestic banks) to priority sectors including agriculture and weaker sections, an RBI directive linked to financial inclusion (see money and banking and the rbi).

Subsidies and irrigation

Agriculture is supported by a large set of input subsidies and irrigation programmes:

  • Fertiliser subsidy: the Government pays manufacturers so that farmers buy fertiliser (especially urea) at a controlled low price; the Nutrient-Based Subsidy applies to phosphatic and potassic fertilisers.
  • Power and irrigation subsidies: free or cheap electricity and canal water in many States, which encourages over-extraction of groundwater.
  • Credit subsidy (interest subvention): cheaper crop loans through the Kisan Credit Card.
  • Sources of irrigation: wells and tube-wells (the largest source), canals, and tanks. The Pradhan Mantri Krishi Sinchayee Yojana promotes micro-irrigation ("per drop more crop").

Subsidies protect farmers but distort cropping (toward water-intensive rice and wheat) and strain the Budget, a recurring policy tension (see budget and fiscal policy).

Governance and security angle

Food security is national security: buffer stocks and the PDS guard against shortages that could cause unrest, and self-sufficiency in foodgrains reduces strategic dependence on imports during a conflict or blockade. Agrarian distress and rural unemployment feed migration and, in some regions, the recruitment pool for extremism, which is why farm-income support and rural employment guarantees carry an internal-security rationale (see poverty unemployment and inclusive growth). Border-area agriculture, including land beyond border fences along the western and eastern frontiers, intersects directly with the work of the central armed police forces, who escort farmers and regulate access to fenced farmland.

Bodies and terms to map

Body or term Role
CACP Recommends the MSP
FCI Procurement, storage, and buffer stocks
NABARD Apex rural credit and refinance
APMC State-regulated wholesale mandi
Cabinet Committee on Economic Affairs Announces the MSP
Ministry of Agriculture and Farmers Welfare Nodal ministry for crops and farmer welfare
ICAR Indian Council of Agricultural Research, the apex farm-research body

How CAPF asks it (authored practice)

  1. The Minimum Support Price is recommended by: a) the FCI b) NABARD c) the Commission for Agricultural Costs and Prices (CACP) d) NITI Aayog Answer: c. The CACP recommends MSP; the Government (CCEA) announces it.

  2. Which of the following is a kharif crop? a) wheat b) gram c) mustard d) rice Answer: d. Rice is a kharif (monsoon) crop; wheat, gram and mustard are rabi.

  3. The "Father of the Green Revolution in India" is: a) Verghese Kurien b) M. S. Swaminathan c) Norman Borlaug d) Amartya Sen Answer: b. M. S. Swaminathan; Borlaug led the global effort; Kurien led the White Revolution.

  4. The agency responsible for procurement and maintaining buffer stocks of foodgrains is: a) NABARD b) the FCI c) the CACP d) the APMC Answer: b. The Food Corporation of India handles procurement, storage, and buffer stocks.

  5. The National Food Security Act was enacted in: a) 2005 b) 2013 c) 2016 d) 2019 Answer: b. The NFSA, 2013 made subsidised grain a legal right for about two-thirds of people.

  6. The online platform that links agricultural mandis across States into a unified market is: a) APMC b) e-NAM c) FCI d) NABARD Answer: b. e-NAM (electronic National Agriculture Market, 2016).

  7. The "Milkman of India", associated with the White Revolution, is: a) M. S. Swaminathan b) Norman Borlaug c) Verghese Kurien d) Amartya Sen Answer: c. Verghese Kurien led Operation Flood, the White Revolution in milk.

Common confusion

  • MSP versus procurement price versus issue price: MSP is the floor for buying from farmers (recommended by the CACP); the issue price is the subsidised price at which grain is sold through the PDS.
  • CACP versus FCI: the CACP recommends MSP; the FCI procures and stores.
  • Kharif versus rabi: kharif is monsoon-sown (rice, cotton, maize); rabi is winter-sown (wheat, gram, mustard).
  • NABARD versus RRBs versus PACS: NABARD is the apex refinance body; RRBs are rural banks; PACS are village-level cooperative societies.
  • Green versus White Revolution: Green is foodgrains (Swaminathan); White is milk (Kurien).

Memory hook

"Kharif comes with the rains (Rice, cotton); Rabi comes in winter (Wheat)." Colours: "Green grain, White milk, Blue fish, Yellow oil, Pink meat, Golden fruit." CACP Counsels MSP, FCI Fills the godowns.

Night before

  • Green Revolution from 1966 to 1967; Swaminathan (India), Borlaug (global); Punjab, Haryana, western UP.
  • White = milk (Kurien); Blue = fish; Yellow = oilseeds.
  • Kharif: rice, maize, cotton; Rabi: wheat, gram, mustard.
  • MSP recommended by the CACP for about 23 crops; FCI procures and stores; NFSA 2013.
  • NABARD (1982) is the apex rural-credit body; PSL norm is 40 percent for domestic banks.

One-line recall

  • Agriculture has a small GDP share but employs the largest share of workers.
  • The Green Revolution began around 1966 to 1967 with HYV seeds, fertilisers, and irrigation.
  • M. S. Swaminathan is the Father of the Indian Green Revolution; Norman Borlaug led it globally.
  • Punjab, Haryana, and western Uttar Pradesh led the wheat Green Revolution.
  • White Revolution = milk (Operation Flood, Verghese Kurien); Blue = fish; Yellow = oilseeds.
  • Kharif: monsoon-sown (rice, maize, cotton); Rabi: winter-sown (wheat, gram, mustard); Zaid: summer.
  • MSP is recommended by the CACP for around 23 crops and announced by the Government.
  • The FCI (1965) handles procurement and buffer stocks; the PDS distributes subsidised grain.
  • The National Food Security Act, 2013 gives subsidised grain to about two-thirds of people.
  • NFSA coverage: up to 75 percent rural and 50 percent urban.
  • NABARD (1982) is the apex rural-credit body; PACS operate at the village level.
  • RRBs were set up under the RRB Act 1976; KCC gives concessional short-term crop credit.
  • Priority-sector lending norms require 40 percent of bank credit to priority sectors.
  • One Nation One Ration Card allows PDS portability across States.
  • India is among the world's largest producers of milk, pulses, rice, wheat, and sugarcane.

Glossary

  • Green Revolution: the mid-1960s leap in foodgrain output from HYV seeds and modern inputs.
  • HYV seeds: high-yielding variety seeds central to the Green Revolution.
  • Operation Flood: the programme behind the White Revolution in milk.
  • Kharif: the monsoon cropping season (rice, maize, cotton).
  • Rabi: the winter cropping season (wheat, gram, mustard).
  • Zaid: the short summer cropping season.
  • MSP: minimum support price, a procurement price floor for farmers.
  • CACP: Commission for Agricultural Costs and Prices, which recommends MSP.
  • FCI: Food Corporation of India, the procurement and buffer-stock agency.
  • PDS / TPDS: the (targeted) public distribution system for subsidised foodgrains.
  • NFSA: National Food Security Act, 2013.
  • Buffer stock: government foodgrain reserves to stabilise supply and prices.
  • NABARD: the apex rural-credit and refinance body (1982).
  • PACS: Primary Agricultural Credit Societies at the village level.
  • RRB: Regional Rural Bank.
  • KCC: Kisan Credit Card, concessional short-term farm credit.
  • Priority-sector lending: RBI-mandated lending to agriculture and weaker sections.
  • APMC: Agricultural Produce Market Committee, the State-regulated wholesale mandi.
  • e-NAM: the electronic National Agriculture Market linking mandis online.
  • FPO: Farmer Producer Organisation, a collective of small farmers.
  • Land ceiling: a legal cap on the maximum landholding.
  • Zamindari abolition: removal of intermediaries between the State and the cultivator.
  • Bhoodan: the voluntary land-gift movement led by Vinoba Bhave.

Current affairs hook

Foodgrain production records, MSP hikes announced before each cropping season, and the PM-KISAN income-support transfer are recurring current-affairs hooks. India is among the world's largest producers of milk, pulses, rice, wheat, sugarcane, and cotton. Treat current production figures, the MSP values, and the PSL norm as currency-sensitive and verify against the most recent Economic Survey and Ministry of Agriculture releases. PM-KISAN provides income support to landholding farmers (see major economic schemes).

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