contract farming 3
TRANSCRIPT
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CONTRACT FARMING
Anurag Bhatnagar, IAS
Director General, NIAM
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Towards High Value Agriculture There is a shift towards high value crops due to rising
income levels, urbanization and population growth,outward oriented trade policy, FDI, growing exports ofhigh value food, growth in retail food markets andgrowth in the food processing sector.
With shift to high value crops, contact farming has
emerged as a preferred (but not always successful)farmer buyer arrangement.
Contd..
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Net gain in profit (%) from Contract Farming over
non Contract Farming:
Commodities Small
farmers
Medium
farmers
Large
farmersMilk 182.0 60.0 20.0
Vegetables 97.6 57.0 53.5
Broilers 7.3 10.4 16.0
(IFPRI, 2005)
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Contract Farming Potential Contract Farming has the potential of addressing
most of the urgent and critical needs of the smallfarmers.
Only way to make small scale farming competitive -small farmers can access technology, credit,marketing channels and information while loweringtransaction costs.
Enables feasible and viable model of private sectorparticipation in agriculture on a massive scale.
CF is a platform for supply of reliable agricultural
produce of specified quality for processing andexport sector
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Present Contract Farming types
( in terms of intermediaries involved) Type 1:
Direct sponsoring company with farmers
only planting materials The extension agency of the company does
registration and other issues of pre-productionand production
No credit facility, into the hands of money lenders
Niijjer Agro( tomato and chilly in Punjab), Tinnaoils( Soyabean in Maharashtra), Himalayan drugsPvt Ltd( Ashwagandha, Karnataka), Pepsico(Basmati, Punjab)
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Type-II Three tier model
Between company and farmers a middle agencypublic or private body or a local NGO
The implementing agency registers and conveys thecontract price
The implementing agency may charge some minorshare of the value of the produce from the buyer and
from the farmers as an extension charge. Ion Exchange Environ farms in Maharashtra for
organic produce
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Type-III Similar to type-II Middle tier is traditional channel like artiyas
Middle helps in identifying farmers,arranging for the cleaning & grading of theproduce and also for procuring the produce
Company gives extension services directly tothe farmers
United Brewries Ltd (Barley, Punjab), ITC-IBD(Soyabean, wheat, Madhya Pradesh)
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Type-IV Most elaborate, all services under single umbrella Implementing agency could be an arm of the company,
coordinates with seed companies, input suppliers, banks,insurance companies etc.
Fee of implementing agency could be .5% to 1.5% of interest ofbank and value of goods
Mahindra Subhlabh services ltd.( Basmati, Non basmati, Maizein PunJ, TN), Escorts Machinery group(Basmati in Punj.), SuperSpinning Mills( Cotton, Tamil Nadu), Cargill India pvt ltd(Soyabean,wheat, maize in M.P and U.P), AppachiCotton(Cotton, Tamil Nadu), Gherkin exporters of Karnataka
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Problems Encountered in Contract
Farming
Asymmetrical contract arrangements with smallfarmers.
Single Buyer Multiple Sellers (Monopsony).
Enforceability of Contract.
Dispute Resolution Breach of Contract.
Production portfolio may be detrimental.
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RECOMMENDATIONS
1. A National Contract farming mission should be setup with a target of bringing at least 10 % small
farmers under Contract Farming in 11th plan.
2. National and State level Contract Farming Policiesshould be framed.
Contd
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RECOMMENDATIONS
3. The states should amend their respective APMR Actsin the line of the Model Act of the Government of India
so as to permit contract farming, direct marketing,and facilitate the appointment of an authority fordispute redressal mechanism.
4. Different models of contract farming should beallowed to evolve as per the situation, instead ofstraitjacketing the models into a particular fixeddefinition
Contd
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RECOMMENDATIONS
5. The proposed contract crop should have a
distinct advantage in terms of relative yieldand profit, which will provide higher incometo the contract farmers on stable basis.
6. The companies should preferably have afocused end use for the produce under
contract farming either for processing,retailing or for export.
Contd
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RECOMMENDATIONS
7. Registration: There should be an institutionalarrangement for registration of sponsoringcompanies and recording of contract farming
agreements with some Government machinery.
The market committee should not beregistration authority for contract farming andthe Contract Farming Sponsor shall get the
contract farming agreement recorded with theSub-Divisional Magistrate, who, in turn, shallverify the credentials of the sponsoringcompany. (TOR 2)
Contd
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RECOMMENDATIONS
8. Dispute redressal: It is necessary to create adispute resolution mechanism which canquickly settle the disputes in a quasi-judicial
manner.
The dispute redressal authority should be at thesub-divisional level comprising a representativeof the sponsoring company, a farmers
representative and the Sub DivisionalMagistrate of the area.
Contd
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RECOMMENDATIONS
9. Purchase interference by a third party in a contractfarming program should be a cause for
disqualification from future contract farmingarrangements.
10. There should be legal binding on the of supply anda penalty /indemnification clause should be
included in the agreement to avoid contractviolation by farmers and sponsors.
Contd
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RECOMMENDATIONS
11. It is necessary to prevent by law the
displacement of farmers from their land as aconsequence of any contract farmingagreement.
12. The sponsoring company should ensure supplyof quality inputs and their timely delivery to thefarmers. The company should be made legallyliable for crop failure due to inputs of poor orspurious quality.
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RECOMMENDATIONS
13.Eliminate red tape in import of varieties / hybridsfor contract farmers
14. In case of production loss due to trial of somenew technology, with which the farmer is totallyunfamiliar, e.g. say some genetically modifiedcrop, the sponsoring company should be
committed to bear the loss and compensate thefarmers. The company, of course, can always takean insurance coverage for this.
Contd
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RECOMMENDATIONS
15. Proper insurance products appropriate for
contract farming need to be developed .
Contd
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RECOMMENDATIONS
16. Contract farming tenures should be permitted for aperiod of 3-5 years or more, to encourage asset
creation for value addition by the sponsoringcompany.
Security of tenure for the sponsoring companieswill encourage them to go in for long term
investment related to the production from thecontracted land.
Contd
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RECOMMENDATIONS
17. Incentives should be given to the sponsoringcompanies for disseminating technical knowledgeor introduction of new technology amongst thefarmers on the line of the Punjab Model of partialreimbursement of extension expenditure of thesponsoring companies.
This incentive should be scaled up to its full extentover a period of say three years; i.e. a company inits first year of contract farming will be gettinglesser incentive than a company in its third year ofoperation of the contract farming .
Contd
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RECOMMENDATIONS
18. Like Punjab and Maharashtra stategovernments, other state government shouldalso totally exempt levy of market fees inrespect of commodities procured under acontract framing agreement.
Abolish all fees, taxes, duties, levies onprocurement effected by a registered contractfarming program to encourage ContractFarming.
Contd
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RECOMMENDATIONS
19. Tax incentives should be given to foodprocessors involved in contract farming for
investment in rural infrastructure related tocontract farming.
No taxes or duties should be charged onimport of agri equipment to be used in a
registered contract farming program.
Contd
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RECOMMENDATIONS
20. Encourage farmer associations and SHGs inthe contract farming chain.
They act as a peer pressure group andmonitor credit worthiness of the members,provide early alerts thereby minimizingdefaults both in terms of sale of produce to
others, as well as on payments.
Contd
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RECOMMENDATIONS
21. A longer period of contract for labor, in place of the
present provision for six months only, will facilitatelong term investment of the companies in trainingand manpower development and lead to skilldevelopment.
Contd
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RECOMMENDATIONS
22. The best contract between parties is on the basisof trust and loyalty.
The sponsoring companies should dischargesome social responsibilities for the farmers inrespect of health, hygiene, education, and longterm training in good agricultural practices, goodhygiene practices, good marketing practices etc.
This would help in sustaining long termrelationship between the farmers and thesponsoring companies.
Contd
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RECOMMENDATIONS
23. There is need for creating widespread
awareness for contract farming through
campaigns, media etc. among farmers.
Contd
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RECOMMENDATIONS
24. It has to be ensured through an appropriatestate agency that contract farming, which isgenerally commodity specific and tends to
promote monoculture, does not grow beyondproportion to destroy bio-diversity andagricultural ecology.
It may be necessary to provide necessary
guidelines for land use planning in eachregion in order to prevent such eventualities.
Contd
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RECOMMENDATIONS
25. State wise identification of agriculturalcommodities suitable for contract farminghas been done by APEDA for exports.
However, a detailed exercise needs to becarried out for processing and domesticmarket.
26. ICAR and University system provide regionspecific crop solutions information shouldbe made part of public information domain.
Contd
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RECOMMENDATIONS
27.Research &Development and training centres to
help the farmers to grow exportable producethrough contract farming should be set up.
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MODEL APMR Act
Private market
Promotion of contract farming, direct
marketing, grading and standardisation
Rationalisation of market fees
Market-led extension
Setting up of bureaus for standards andgrading
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Provisions for Contract Farmingin the Model Act
Model agreement format
Registration of contracts
Dispute redressal mechanism
Indemnity of farmers land
Presently by Contract Act, notadequate.
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Thanks