Centre to brief MPs on crop insurance scheme


PMFBY: Centre to Brief MPs on Crop Insurance Scheme

UPSC Study Note — Prelims + Mains | GS-II & GS-III


1. At a Glance


2. Why in the News


3. Background & Evolution

Year Milestone
Pre-2016 Comprehensive Crop Insurance Scheme (CCIS, 1985); National Agricultural Insurance Scheme (NAIS, 1999); Modified NAIS (MNAIS, 2010); Weather-Based Crop Insurance Scheme (WBCIS) — predecessors with limited reach and high premium burden on farmers
18 Jan 2016 PMFBY launched, replacing NAIS and MNAIS, with capped farmer premium and One Nation–One Scheme architecture [S1]
2018 Participation made voluntary for all farmers (previously compulsory for loanee farmers availing crop loans for notified crops) [S1]
2020 Cabinet approved major restructuring: States given flexibility to join; separate budget heads for Central share introduced; area correction module added [S3]
Jan 2025 Cabinet approves extension of PMFBY + RWBCIS through 2025-26 with ₹69,515.71 crore outlay [S2]
Kharif 2024 Automatic 12% penalty on insurers for delayed claim payment introduced [S2]
Kharif 2025 Mandatory ESCROW accounts for States to deposit their premium share in advance [S2]
2025 (9th year) 78.407 crore farmer applications insured since inception; ₹1.83 lakh crore in total claims paid [S4]

4. Core Static Facts

Identity - Full Name: Pradhan Mantri Fasal Bima Yojana (PMFBY) - Launch Date: Kharif season 2016 - Type: Central Sector Scheme (100% Central funding for premium subsidy, shared with States — see below) [S1] - Implementing Ministry: Ministry of Agriculture & Farmers' Welfare (MoAFW) [S1] - Nodal Agency: Agriculture Insurance Company of India (AIC) and empanelled private insurers [S1] - Portal: National Crop Insurance Portal (NCIP) — digitises farmer-insurer-bank interaction [S1]

Premium Structure [S1] | Crop Type | Max Farmer Premium | |-----------|-------------------| | Kharif food & oilseed crops | 2% of sum insured | | Rabi food & oilseed crops | 1.5% of sum insured | | Annual commercial/horticultural crops | 5% of sum insured | | Remaining premium | Shared equally between Centre & States |

Coverage Scope [S1] - Pre-sowing to post-harvest losses - Natural calamities: drought, flood, hailstorm, cyclone, inundation, landslide, earthquake - Pests & diseases - Post-harvest losses (up to 14 days for specified perils) - Prevented sowing / planting risk

Participation [S1] - Compulsory: Loanee farmers availing Kisan Credit Card (KCC) / crop loans for notified crops in notified areas - Voluntary: Non-loanee and tenant farmers

Scale (cumulative since 2016 to 2024-25) [S4] - Total farmer applications insured: 78.407 crore - Farmers who received claims: 22.667 crore - Total claims paid: ₹1.83 lakh crore - Coverage of farmer applications: grew from 371 lakh (2014-15) to 1,510 lakh (2024-25) - Non-loanee farmer applications: grew from 20 lakh (2014-15) to 522 lakh (2024-25)

Financial Outlay [S2] - Cabinet-approved budget for continuation (up to 2025-26): ₹69,515.71 crore

Technology Tools [S1] - YES-TECH: Yield Estimation System based on remote sensing - CROPIC: Collection of Real-time Photos and Observations of Crops (geotagged photos) - Drones & Smartphones: Rapid crop loss assessment - NCIP: National Crop Insurance Portal


5. Multi-Dimensional Analysis

Economic

Social

Environmental / Climate

Legal / Constitutional

Ethical / Governance

Administrative


6. Recent Developments (Last 12–18 Months)


7. Prelims Hooks

  1. PMFBY was launched in Kharif season 2016, replacing the National Agricultural Insurance Scheme (NAIS) and Modified NAIS (MNAIS). [S1]
  2. Maximum farmer premium under PMFBY for Kharif food crops is 2%; for Rabi food crops is 1.5%; for commercial/horticultural crops is 5%. [S1]
  3. PMFBY is a Central Sector Scheme — not a Centrally Sponsored Scheme — implemented by the Ministry of Agriculture & Farmers' Welfare. [S1]
  4. The scheme is compulsory for loanee farmers (KCC holders) for notified crops, and voluntary for non-loanee farmers. [S1]
  5. YES-TECH (Yield Estimation System based on Technology) uses remote sensing for yield estimation under PMFBY. [S1]
  6. CROPIC is the tool under PMFBY that uses geotagged photographs to verify crop damage. [S1]
  7. The National Crop Insurance Portal (NCIP) digitises the farmer-insurer-bank interface under PMFBY. [S1]
  8. Total claims paid under PMFBY since inception (as of 2024-25): ₹1.83 lakh crore to 22.667 crore farmer applications. [S4]
  9. Cabinet-approved outlay for PMFBY + RWBCIS (up to 2025-26): ₹69,515.71 crore. [S2]
  10. From Kharif 2024, a 12% penalty is automatically applied to insurers for delayed claim settlements. [S2]
  11. From Kharif 2025, States must maintain a mandatory ESCROW account for advance premium deposits. [S2]
  12. Non-loanee farmer applications increased from 20 lakh (2014-15) to 522 lakh (2024-25) under PMFBY. [S4]
  13. On 18 March 2026, Lok Sabha Speaker Om Birla directed the government to brief MPs on PMFBY during Question Hour. [S5]
  14. The Restructured Weather Based Crop Insurance Scheme (RWBCIS) runs parallel to PMFBY and was jointly extended in January 2025. [S2]
  15. PMFBY covers losses from pre-sowing to post-harvest stage, including prevented sowing risk and localised calamities like hailstorm and landslide. [S1]

8. Mains Relevance

GS Paper Mapping | GS Paper | Syllabus Heading | |----------|-----------------| | GS-III | Government Budgeting; Agriculture; Food Security; Government Schemes | | GS-II | Government Policies & Interventions for Development in Various Sectors; Welfare Schemes for Vulnerable Sections |

Plausible Mains Question Stems 1. "Pradhan Mantri Fasal Bima Yojana has emerged as one of the world's largest crop insurance programmes, yet significant challenges in implementation persist. Critically examine." (GS-III, 15 marks) 2. "The recent mandate of ESCROW accounts for State governments and the 12% penalty for delayed claims signal a shift in PMFBY's governance architecture. Analyse the implications for Centre-State cooperation in agricultural risk management." (GS-III, 10 marks) 3. "Despite its scale, awareness of PMFBY remains inadequate even among elected representatives. What does this reveal about the gaps in India's welfare scheme delivery ecosystem?" (GS-II, 10 marks)


9. Related Topics to Study Next

  1. Kisan Credit Card (KCC) Scheme — PMFBY is compulsory for KCC holders; understanding KCC clarifies loanee farmer enrollment mechanics.
  2. Minimum Support Price (MSP) & Procurement Policy — Both are income-stabilisation tools for farmers; UPSC often links them in a single question.
  3. PM-KISAN (PM Kisan Samman Nidhi) — Another flagship direct-benefit scheme for farmers; frequently compared with PMFBY in policy analysis.
  4. Agricultural Credit & NABARD — NABARD channels credit to agriculture; crop insurance rides on the same credit ecosystem.
  5. Restructured Weather Based Crop Insurance Scheme (RWBCIS) — Runs in parallel with PMFBY, uses weather indices instead of yield; extended jointly in 2025.
  6. Climate Change & Indian Agriculture — PMFBY is a climate adaptation tool; relevant for Environment + Agriculture crossover questions.
  7. Cooperative Federalism in Agriculture — States opting out of PMFBY is a classic case study for Centre-State friction on concurrent/state subjects.
  8. Digital Agriculture Mission — YES-TECH, CROPIC, and drone-based assessment fit within India's broader Digital Agriculture stack.

10. Common Errors / Trap Areas

  1. CSS vs. Central Sector Scheme: PMFBY is a Central Sector Scheme, not a Centrally Sponsored Scheme. In CSS, States share implementation cost; in Central Sector, Centre funds everything except the premium subsidy split. Do not confuse.
  2. Premium % confusion: The 2% cap applies only to Kharif food/oilseed crops. Rabi is 1.5% and commercial/horticultural is 5%. Aspirants often mis-apply the 2% figure universally.
  3. Voluntary vs. Compulsory: Many aspirants believe PMFBY is entirely voluntary. It is compulsory for loanee farmers (KCC/crop loan holders) for notified crops in notified areas; voluntary only for non-loanee farmers.
  4. PMFBY ≠ WBCIS/RWBCIS: PMFBY covers yield-based losses (assessed via crop cutting experiments / YES-TECH). The Restructured WBCIS covers losses based on weather indices (temperature, rainfall, humidity) — a fundamentally different trigger mechanism. These two are often confused.
  5. Year of launch: PMFBY was launched in 2016 (Kharif season), not 2014 or 2015. The predecessor schemes (NAIS, MNAIS) existed before that. Do not conflate.

11. Sources