Agri Ministry Revises Market Intervention Scheme Guidelines

By By Rediff Money Desk, New Delhi
Feb 10, 2025 22:05
India's agriculture ministry has revised guidelines for the Market Intervention Scheme (MIS), increasing the procurement limit of crops to 25 percent. The changes aim to encourage states to implement the MIS and ensure farmers are not forced to sell their produce under distress.
Illustration: Uttam Ghosh/Rediff.com
New Delhi, Feb 10 (PTI) The agriculture ministry has revised guidelines for Market Intervention Scheme (MIS), increasing the procurement limit of crops to 25 per cent from 20 per cent.

The guidelines has been revised to encourage states to implement the MIS.

According to an official statement on Monday, MIS is a component of PM-AASHA scheme.

The MIS is implemented on the request of state/UT government for procurement of various perishable agricultural/horticultural commodities such as tomato, onion and potato, etc, for which minimum support price (MSP) is not applicable and there is a reduction of at least 10 per cent in market prices in states/UTs as compared to the rates of the previous normal season.

The scheme is to ensure farmers are not forced to sell their produce under distress.

To encourage more states for implementation of MIS, the government has revised the MIS guidelines.

In the revised norms, the government has made MIS a component of the integrated scheme of PM-AASHA.

"MIS will be implemented only when there is a minimum reduction of 10 per cent in the prevailing market price as compared to the previous normal year," it added.

The procurement/coverage limit of production quantity of crops has been increased from the existing 20 per cent to 25 per cent, it added.

The state has also been given the option to pay the difference between the market intervention price (MIP) and the selling price directly into the bank account of the farmers in place of physical procurement.

Further, where there is a difference in the price of TOP crops (tomato, onion and potato) between the producing and consuming states, the operational cost incurred in storage and transportation of crops from the producing state to other consuming states will be reimbursed by Central Nodal Agencies (CNA) such as NAFED and NCCF, in the interest of farmers.

Approval has been given to NCCF for reimbursement of cost for transportation of kharif tomato up to 1,000 tonnes from Madhya Pradesh to Delhi.

It is being proposed to include, apart from NAFED and NCCF, farmer producer organisations, farmer producer companies, state-nominated agencies and other central nodal agencies, to undertake procurement of TOP crops under MIS.
Source: PTI
Read More On:
market intervention schememisagriculture ministryfarmersprocurement
DISCLAIMER - This article is from a syndicated feed. The original source is responsible for accuracy, views & content ownership. Views expressed may not reflect those of rediff.com India Limited.

You May Like To Read

MORE NEWS

Chennai Bullion Rates Today

Check the opening bullion rates in Chennai today. Gold (22K, 18K) and silver prices per...

NAFED Urad Procurement in UP: 50 Centers Open

NAFED to open 50 urad procurement centers in 17 UP districts. Farmers can sell at MSP...

NCLAT Asks Renewal of Bank Guarantee for IL&FS...

NCLAT directs Brookfield-backed Chronos to renew bank guarantee for acquiring IL&FS...

SBI Reduces Lending Rate After RBI Cut

SBI cuts lending rate by 25 bps after RBI rate cut. Loans become cheaper for borrowers....

Pakistan & Binance Pact: Tokenisation of Assets

Pakistan and Binance sign MoU for tokenisation of assets up to USD 2 billion. Boost...

IndiGo Seeks Rs 900 Cr Customs Duty Refund in...

IndiGo moves Delhi HC for Rs 900 crore Customs duty refund on re-imported aircraft...

Sebi Clears Pranav Adani in Insider Trading Case

Sebi clears Pranav Adani, Adani Group director, of insider trading charges related to...

Sebi Officials & Asset Disclosure: Privacy...

Sebi officials express privacy concerns over public asset disclosure. Pandey discusses...

New Labour Codes: Supply Chains, Wages, Skilling

New Labour Codes in India aim for frictionless supply chains, universal wage coverage,...

Fidelity Buys 6.3% Stake in Meesho

Fidelity International acquires a 6.3% stake in e-commerce firm Meesho. The stake is...

Read More »

Sectoral Indices Market Indicators Listed Companies Gainers Losers Mutual Funds Portfolio Watchlist
© 2025 Rediff.com