Context:
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Narendra Modi launched a comprehensive package of agriculture-focused schemes worth ₹35,440 crore, aimed at raising productivity, achieving pulses self-sufficiency, strengthening agri-infrastructure, and enhancing farmers’ incomes.
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The initiatives align with the Union Budget 2025–26 announcements and reinforce the government’s push for Atmanirbhar Bharat in agriculture with an export orientation.
Key Highlights:
Major Schemes and Financial Outlay
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PM Dhan Dhaanya Krishi Yojana (PMDDKY):
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Outlay: ₹24,000 crore
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Coverage: 100 agricultural districts
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Selection criteria: Low productivity, moderate crop intensity, and below-average access to institutional credit.
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Mission for Aatmanirbharta in Pulses:
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Outlay: ₹11,440 crore
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Objective: Increase domestic pulse production and reduce import dependence.
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Infrastructure and Allied Sectors Push
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Agriculture Infrastructure Fund (AIF):
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1,054 projects inaugurated worth ₹3,650 crore completed after June 2024.
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Focus on post-harvest management, storage, and value chains.
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Animal Husbandry & Fisheries:
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17 animal husbandry projects worth ₹1,166 crore.
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16 fisheries projects worth ₹693 crore under PM Matsya Sampada Yojana (PMMSY).
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Food Processing:
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11 projects worth ₹808 crore under PM Kisan Sampada Yojana and PLI Scheme for Food Processing Industry (PLISFPI) to boost value addition and exports.
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Strategy and Convergence
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PMDDKY will leverage convergence of existing schemes (credit, irrigation, seeds, extension) to deliver district-specific solutions.
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Emphasis on global market-aligned crops, enabling farmers to produce for both domestic needs and exports.
Farmer Support Measures
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Fertiliser subsidies: Over ₹13 lakh crore provided in the last 10 years.
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PM Kisan Samman Nidhi: ₹3.75 lakh crore directly transferred to farmers’ bank accounts.
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GST rate reductions: Lowered costs for farm machinery and animal husbandry inputs, improving profitability.
Economic and Governance Rationale
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Shift from input-heavy support to infrastructure-led productivity and value addition.
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Focus on district-centric planning, credit access, and supply-chain resilience.
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Aims to stabilise prices, enhance incomes, and reduce import dependence, especially for pulses.
Challenges and Way Forward
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Success hinges on:
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Timely scheme convergence and last-mile delivery.
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Extension services and quality inputs.
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Strengthening markets, storage, and logistics.
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Balancing export orientation with domestic food security remains critical.
UPSC Relevance (GS-wise):
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GS Paper 3 – Indian Economy
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Prelims:
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PM Kisan Samman Nidhi, MSP, Agriculture Infrastructure Fund (AIF).
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Mains:
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Role of infrastructure and value addition in raising farm incomes.
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Pulses self-sufficiency and import substitution.
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District-centric approaches to agricultural transformation.
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GS Paper 2 – Governance
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Prelims:
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Government schemes for agriculture and allied sectors.
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Mains:
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Convergence-based governance and outcomes in rural development.
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Direct Benefit Transfer (DBT) and subsidy reforms in agriculture.
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