The Farmers Produce Trade and Commerce Ordinance, issued by the Central Government recently, needs to be studied in great detail due to its impact on the farmers and Agriculture Produce Market Committees (APMCs) in the State, said Maharashtra Cooperation Minister, Balasaheb Patil.
The Ordinance was issued on June 5 aiming to reform the APMC and to create an unified market across the country for agriculture produce.
Patil told
A senior Maharashtra Government official told
The Ordinance talks about issues such as selling farm produce anywhere in the country. Issues such as contract farming and how to make a contract if farm inputs are providedrequire a detailed study about practical benefit to farmers and market committees, the official said.
The official added that APMCs were set up with an intention to prevent farmers from getting low prices and protecting them from financial fraud in the sale and purchase of agricultural commodities. The State has also spent a huge amount from its budget on market committees and its infrastructure, their presence needs to work out in ‘one country, one market’.
Even cotton sale was completely deregulated in Maharashtra in the last decade with the State government stopping procurement of the fibre on a large scale but again in the last two years, the farmers have been demanding the State’s intervention to buy cotton. In the same way, APMC has its uses, which needs to be fine-tuned.