Agriculture in India
is highly susceptible to risks like droughts and floods. It is necessary to protect the farmers from natural calamities and ensure their credit eligibility for the next season. For this purpose, the
Government of India
introduced many agricultural social insurances throughout the country, the most important one of them being
Pradhan Mantri Fasal Bima Yojana
.
Current insurance schemes
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Pradhan Mantri Fasal Bima Yojana
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The
Pradhan Mantri Fasal Bima Yojana
(Prime Minister's Crop Insurance Scheme) was launched by
Prime Minister of India
Narendra Modi
on 13 February 2016.
[1]
[2]
Livestock Insurance Scheme
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Livestock Insurance Scheme in India
provided "provide protection mechanism to the farmers and cattle rearers against any eventual loss of their animals due to death and to demonstrate the benefit of the insurance of livestock to the people and popularize it with the ultimate goal of attaining qualitative improvement in livestock and their products."
[3]
Other agriculture schemes launched by Modi regime
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Agriculture initiatives schemes launched by the Modi regime are:
[3]
Previous schemes
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Farm Income Insurance Scheme
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The Central Government formulated the Farm Income Insurance Scheme (FIIS) during 2003-04. The two critical components of a farmer's income are yield and price. FIIS targeted these two components through a single insurance policy so that the insured farmer could get a guaranteed income.
[
citation needed
]
The scheme provided income protection to the farmers by insuring production and market risks. The insured farmers were ensured minimum guaranteed income (that is, average yield multiplied by the minimum support price). If the actual income was less than the guaranteed income, the insured would be compensated to the extent of the shortfall by the
Agriculture Insurance Company of India
. Initially, the scheme would cover only wheat and rice and would be compulsory for farmers availing crop loans. NAIS (explained in the section below) would be withdrawn for the crops covered under FIIS, but would continue to be applicable for other crops.
[
citation needed
]
The FIIS was withdrawn in 2004.
[4]
[5]
National Agriculture Insurance Scheme
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The Government of India experimented with a comprehensive crop insurance scheme which failed. The Government then introduced in 1999-2000, a new scheme titled “National Agricultural Insurance Scheme” (NAIS) or “Rashtriya Krishi Bima Yojana” (RKBY).
[6]
NAIS envisages coverage of all food crops (cereals and pulses), oilseeds, horticultural and commercial crops. It covers all farmers, both loanees and non-loanees, under the scheme.
The
premium
rates vary from 1.5 percent to 3.5 percent of sum assured for food crops. In the case of horticultural and commercial crops, actuarial rates are charged. Small and marginal farmers are entitled to a subsidy of 50 percent of the premium charged- the subsidy is shared equally between the Government of India and the States. The subsidy is to be phased out over a period of 5 years.
NAIS operates on the basis of
- Area approach
- On individual basis- for localized calamities such as hailstorms, landslides, cyclones and floods.
Under the scheme, each state is required to reach the level Gram Panchayat as the unit of insurance in a maximum period of 3 years. Agriculture Insurance Corporation of India is implementing the scheme. This scheme is replaced by Pradhan Mantri Fasal Bima Yojana.
Economic interactions
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The
minimum support price
subsidy influences insurance pricing. The
insurable interest
is calculated as normal for an unsubsidised
crop
, but for subsidised crops the MSP is used. This distorts the function of the insurance market. Although this program is intended to increase per farmer income ? a goal advocated by
Bhimrao Ramji Ambedkar
? setting an artificial price also impairs decision making in
crop insurance
? also a major policy focus for Ambedkar, the subject of many of his public speeches, and some of his academic work.
[7]
References
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]
- ^
"Fasal Bima Yojana will solve farmers' problems: PM Modi"
,
The Times of India
, 18 February 2016,
archived
from the original on 6 May 2021
, retrieved
19 February
2016
- ^
"Crop insurance scheme will benefit farmers: Modi"
,
Business Standard
, 18 February 2016,
archived
from the original on 19 February 2016
, retrieved
19 February
2016
- ^
a
b
10 important government schemes for agriculture sector
, India today, 2019-08-30.
- ^
"Farm Income Insurance Scheme withdrawn"
.
The Hindu Business Line
. 11 June 2004
. Retrieved
14 October
2011
.
- ^
"Protecting the small farmer - the Hindu"
.
The Hindu
.
Archived
from the original on 9 March 2021
. Retrieved
4 April
2015
.
- ^
NationalAgriculturalInsuranceScheme (NAIS) / Rashtriya Krishi Bima Yojana (RKBY)
Archived
4 January 2011 at the
Wayback Machine
- ^
Gangopadhyay, Shubhashis; Sen, Paroma (2016). "Improving the Lot of Indian Farmers".
Review of Market Integration
.
8
(1?2).
Sage
: 34?48.
doi
:
10.1177/0974929216687907
.
ISSN
0974-9292
.
S2CID
158722403
.
External links
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