HomeNewsOpinionOpinion | Why Modi's farm income support scheme could be a game changer in the elections

Opinion | Why Modi's farm income support scheme could be a game changer in the elections

Those who say that the PM-KISAN scheme won’t make much of a difference simply do not have any idea of how poor the vast majority of our people are.

February 25, 2019 / 11:19 IST
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The Tamil Nadu agriculture department has claimed that around Rs 32 crore has so far been recovered
The Tamil Nadu agriculture department has claimed that around Rs 32 crore has so far been recovered

Manas Chakravarty Moneycontrol News

The prime minister launched the farm income support scheme on Sunday, transferring Rs 2,000 per household to over a crore farmers. The plan is to transfer Rs 6,000 a year to every farming household having cultivable land up to 2 hectares.

The scheme has been criticised by the opposition, who say Rs 6,000 a year is peanuts. Let’s take a look at the data to see whether it will really make a difference to small and marginal farmers.

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The NABARD (National Bank for Agricultural and Rural Development) All India Rural Financial Inclusion Survey 2016-17 has details about agricultural households. It says 87 per cent of households have land holdings of up to 2 hectares. That means 87 per cent of farming households will ultimately benefit from the farm support scheme.

How much of a difference will the extra Rs 6000 per annum make? The NABARD survey says that, for those owning less than 0.01 hectares of land, income per month was Rs 8,136 while consumption expenditure was Rs 6,594, giving a surplus of Rs 1,542 per month. An additional Rs 6,000 will, therefore, amount to 3.9 months of the surplus. Even if we assume that the surplus has increased, say by 10 per cent over 2016-17, the additional Rs 6,000 will still be three and a half months of the surplus.