Centre pushes States to speed up farm scheme fund release
Centre Pushes States to Speed Up Farm Scheme Fund Release
UPSC Prelims + Mains Study Note | GS-II & GS-III | Agriculture & Governance
1. At a Glance
- PM-KISAN (Pradhan Mantri Kisan Samman Nidhi) is a Central Sector Scheme providing ₹6,000/year direct income support to eligible farmer families in three equal instalments of ₹2,000 each via Direct Benefit Transfer (DBT). [S1]
- The Centre has flagged that States' administrative delays — including tardy beneficiary verification and claim settlement — are blocking timely release of subsequent central instalments. [S4]
- This topic tests cooperative federalism, DBT architecture, fiscal federalism in agriculture, and scheme implementation accountability — high-frequency UPSC themes.
- Agriculture is a State subject (List II, Seventh Schedule) yet PM-KISAN is centrally funded; this creates a critical federal coordination challenge.
2. Why in the News
- 4 January 2026: Union Agriculture Minister Shivraj Singh Chouhan publicly urged States to adopt a strategic approach to budget utilisation, warning that unspent allocations cause losses to States and delay the Centre's release of subsequent instalments. [S4]
- He specifically stressed prompt verification of eligible farmers under PM-KISAN and timely settlement of claims, citing "minor administrative issues" as the chief bottleneck. [S4]
- The statement came amid the disbursement cycle leading to the 22nd instalment, released on 13 March 2026 at Guwahati, Assam, covering ~9.32 crore farmers (₹18,640 crore). [S3]
3. Background & Evolution
| Year | Milestone |
|---|---|
| Feb 2019 | PM-KISAN launched (announced in Interim Budget 2019-20); first instalment released on 24 Feb 2019 by PM Modi at Gorakhpur, UP. [S1] |
| 2019 | Scheme expanded to all farmer families (initially limited to small & marginal farmers holding up to 2 hectares). [S1] |
| 2020 | eKYC made mandatory for beneficiaries to curb leakages; Aadhaar-seeding of bank accounts required. [S2] |
| 2021-22 | Land-seeding on PM-KISAN portal made mandatory condition; states responsible for uploading and verifying beneficiary data. [S2] |
| Aug 2025 | 20th instalment released; cumulative disbursement crossed ₹3.70 lakh crore to 11+ crore farmer families. [S2] |
| Mar 2026 | 22nd instalment released (~₹18,640 crore). [S3] |
Predecessors / Related Initiatives: Earlier income-support pilots in Telangana (Rythu Bandhu, 2018) and Odisha (KALIA) influenced the design of PM-KISAN's direct-transfer model.
4. Core Static Facts
Scheme Identity - Full name: Pradhan Mantri Kisan Samman Nidhi (PM-KISAN) [S1] - Type: Central Sector Scheme (100% Central Government funding) [S1] - Launched: 24 February 2019 [S1] - Implementing Ministry: Ministry of Agriculture & Farmers' Welfare (Department of Agriculture & Farmers' Welfare) [S1] - Mode: Direct Benefit Transfer (DBT) directly to Aadhaar-seeded bank accounts [S2]
Financial Architecture - Annual support: ₹6,000 per eligible farmer family [S1] - Instalment frequency: 3 instalments × ₹2,000 each (April–July, August–November, December–March) [S2] - Budget allocation (2026-27): ₹60,000 crore [S3] - Cumulative disbursement (through 20 instalments, Aug 2025): > ₹3.70 lakh crore [S2] - Administrative expense support: Centre provides 0.125% of instalment amount to States/UTs for PMU and admin costs; total so far ₹265.64 crore (as of 12 Aug 2025) [S2]
Eligibility Conditions - Farmer family must have land details seeded on PM-KISAN portal [S2] - Aadhaar-seeded bank account mandatory [S2] - eKYC completion mandatory [S2] - Excludes: institutional landholders, constitutional post-holders, serving/retired govt employees (above a salary threshold), income-tax payees, professionals [S1]
Beneficiary Scale - Current beneficiaries: ~9.32 crore farmers (22nd instalment, Mar 2026) [S3] - Peak coverage: 11+ crore farmer families [S2] - Largest state beneficiary (18th instalment): Uttar Pradesh (~2.25 crore farmers) [S1] - Maharashtra (2nd highest): ~1.20 crore farmers, ₹32,000 crore+ received through 17 instalments [S1]
5. Multi-Dimensional Analysis
Economic
- PM-KISAN injects liquidity directly into rural households at the farm-gate, reducing dependence on informal credit for input purchase. [S1]
- Delays in fund release break the agricultural credit cycle — farmers who haven't received verification clearance miss timely input financing before kharif/rabi sowing seasons. [S4]
- Unspent State budgets constitute an opportunity cost: funds sitting idle in treasury earn sub-optimal returns and deny multiplier effects in rural economies. [S4]
- Scheme's DBT design has cut leakages substantially compared to older subsidy regimes, but State-level data-entry bottlenecks reintroduce friction. [S2]
Administrative / Governance
- Federal asymmetry: Agriculture is a State subject, but PM-KISAN is 100% Centre-funded — States are implementers without full financial ownership, reducing urgency in administration. [S4]
- State PMUs (Programme Management Units) are responsible for beneficiary verification, Aadhaar seeding, land record upload — the exact activities flagged as slow by the Union Minister. [S2]
- "Conditionality chain": Centre releases next instalment only after States confirm utilisation of prior funds and authenticate beneficiary lists — creating a contingent disbursement mechanism. [S4]
- Minor administrative issues (mismatched land records, Aadhaar name discrepancies, incomplete eKYC) cause bulk exclusions and drag down State-level absorption rates. [S4]
Social
- Delays disproportionately harm small & marginal farmers (holdings < 2 ha) — the primary intended beneficiaries — who lack buffers and cannot wait for verification errors to be corrected. [S1]
- Women farmers: Land records in many States remain in male names; title/ownership discrepancy causes verification failures for women beneficiaries. [S2]
- Tribal farmers with customary/community land — not formally registered — face systematic exclusion. [S2]
Legal / Constitutional
- Seventh Schedule, List II, Entry 14: Agriculture — exclusive State subject; PM-KISAN operates as a Central Sector Scheme via executive action under Article 73 (executive power of the Union). [Background]
- No separate Act: PM-KISAN operates under the government's executive financial powers, not a dedicated statute — making it vulnerable to budgetary discretion changes.
- DBT under Aadhaar (Targeted Delivery of Financial and Other Subsidies, Benefits and Services) Act, 2016 governs the Aadhaar-seeding requirement. [S2]
Ethical / Governance
- Public pressure by the Union Minister on States creates reputational accountability but lacks enforceable legal remedy for farmers denied timely benefits. [S4]
- The conditionality mechanism (withhold next instalment pending State action) is an incentive tool but can punish farmers for State bureaucratic failure they have no control over. [S4]
- Transparency gap: Farmers often lack visibility into why they were excluded from a particular instalment — grievance redressal is weak. [S2]
Historical
- Post-Green Revolution policy paradigm focused on input subsidies (fertiliser, power, water) rather than direct income; PM-KISAN marks a paradigm shift toward income support, mirroring global models (US Farm Bill direct payments, EU CAP income support). [Background]
- Rajasthan's Bhamashah scheme and Andhra Pradesh's Indiramma programme are earlier State-level predecessors of direct farmer transfers. [Background]
6. Recent Developments (Last 12–18 Months)
- Feb 2025: 19th instalment released at Bhagalpur, Bihar by PM Modi. [S1]
- Aug 2025: 20th instalment released; total disbursement crossed ₹3.70 lakh crore to 11+ crore farmer families. [S2]
- Nov 2025: 21st instalment released on 19 November 2025 — specifically directed at rain/flood-affected States (Himachal Pradesh, Punjab, Uttarakhand) via video conferencing by Agriculture Minister Chouhan. [S1]
- Jan 2026: Agriculture Minister publicly urges States to accelerate fund utilisation and beneficiary verification, citing administrative bottlenecks. [S4]
- 13 March 2026: 22nd instalment released at Guwahati, Assam by PM Modi; ₹18,640 crore disbursed to ~9.32 crore farmers. [S3]
7. Prelims Hooks
- PM-KISAN launched on: 24 February 2019 at Gorakhpur, Uttar Pradesh. [S1]
- Annual income support under PM-KISAN: ₹6,000 per eligible farmer family. [S1]
- Instalment structure: 3 instalments of ₹2,000 each, disbursed via DBT. [S2]
- Funding pattern: 100% Central Government (Central Sector Scheme — not Centrally Sponsored). [S1]
- Implementing Ministry: Ministry of Agriculture & Farmers' Welfare (not Ministry of Finance). [S1]
- Mandatory conditions for eligibility: Land seeding on PM-KISAN portal + Aadhaar-seeded bank account + eKYC completion. [S2]
- Administrative cost support to States: 0.125% of instalment amount; ₹265.64 crore released as of Aug 2025. [S2]
- Cumulative disbursement through 20 instalments (Aug 2025): >₹3.70 lakh crore. [S2]
- 22nd instalment: Released 13 March 2026 at Guwahati, Assam; ₹18,640 crore to ~9.32 crore farmers. [S3]
- Budget allocation for PM-KISAN (2026-27): ₹60,000 crore. [S3]
- Largest beneficiary State (18th instalment): Uttar Pradesh (~2.25 crore farmers). [S1]
- Legal basis for Aadhaar-seeding requirement: Aadhaar Act, 2016 (Targeted Delivery of Financial and Other Subsidies, Benefits and Services). [S2]
- PM-KISAN is a Central Sector Scheme — States are implementation partners but do not contribute funds. [S1]
- Centre's lever for State compliance: Conditionality — next central instalment is released only after States verify utilisation and authenticate beneficiary data. [S4]
8. Mains Relevance
GS Paper Mapping
| Paper | Syllabus Heading |
|---|---|
| GS-II | Government policies and interventions for development in various sectors; Issues relating to development and management of Social Sector/Services; Centre-State relations; Federalism |
| GS-III | Indian Economy; Issues related to direct and indirect farm subsidies; Food security; DBT |
Plausible Mains Question Stems
- "Direct income support schemes like PM-KISAN represent a paradigm shift from input subsidies. Critically examine the implementation challenges in India's federal context." (GS-III, 15 marks)
- "The Centre's conditionality mechanism in releasing PM-KISAN instalments raises governance concerns about federal accountability. Discuss the ethical and administrative implications." (GS-II/GS-IV, 10 marks)
- "Examine the role of DBT in transforming the architecture of agricultural support in India. What structural reforms in State administration are needed for effective implementation?" (GS-III, 15 marks)
9. Related Topics to Study Next
| Topic | Why Connected |
|---|---|
| Cooperative Federalism & Centre-State Financial Relations | PM-KISAN exemplifies tensions in concurrent implementation of Central programmes by State machinery |
| Direct Benefit Transfer (DBT) Architecture | The entire PM-KISAN delivery rests on DBT; understanding JAM Trinity (Jan Dhan–Aadhaar–Mobile) is essential |
| Aadhaar Act, 2016 & Digital Identity | Legal backbone for beneficiary authentication in PM-KISAN and all DBT schemes |
| PM-KISAN vs. Rythu Bandhu vs. KALIA | Comparative analysis of income support models (Centre vs. State-led) is a common Mains ask |
| Agricultural Credit & Kisan Credit Card (KCC) | Closely linked: PM-KISAN beneficiaries often channelled to KCC; both address farm liquidity |
| Public Distribution System (PDS) Reform & FCI | Parallel trajectory — subsidy-to-DBT shift underway in food also; comparative governance lens |
| Seventh Schedule & Agriculture (List II, Entry 14) | Constitutional basis for why States are implementers despite full central funding |
| PM-FASAL BIMA YOJANA & PMFBY | Related farm-welfare scheme family; often confused in exam questions on agriculture ministry schemes |
10. Common Errors / Trap Areas
-
Central Sector vs. Centrally Sponsored Scheme: PM-KISAN is a Central Sector Scheme (100% Centre funded, implemented through Central machinery with State assistance). It is NOT a Centrally Sponsored Scheme (where States co-fund). Candidates frequently confuse these.
-
Implementing Ministry: PM-KISAN is under Ministry of Agriculture & Farmers' Welfare — NOT the Ministry of Finance or Ministry of Rural Development (which handles MGNREGS, PMGSY etc.).
-
Instalment timing confusion: The three instalments are released in April–July, August–November, December–March — NOT aligned to crop seasons in a predictable way; candidates sometimes conflate with kharif/rabi cycle.
-
eKYC vs. Aadhaar-seeding: Both are distinct requirements — Aadhaar-seeded bank account (links Aadhaar to account) ≠ eKYC (biometric/OTP-based identity authentication on the PM-KISAN portal). Failure of either leads to exclusion.
-
Why instalment numbers are falling despite more funds: The drop from 11+ crore to ~9.32 crore beneficiaries in recent instalments reflects clean-up of ineligible beneficiaries (government employees, taxpayers, etc.) — not a reduction in scheme scope. Candidates may misread this as scheme contraction.
11. Sources
- [S1] Prime Minister to Release 18th Instalment of PM-KISAN Scheme at Washim, Maharashtra on 5th October 2024 — https://www.pib.gov.in/PressReleasePage.aspx?PRID=2061923 — (Tier 1)
- [S2] Eligibility Criteria of PM-KISAN; PM-KISAN completes 19/20 successful instalments — https://www.pib.gov.in/PressReleasePage.aspx?PRID=2146932 ; https://www.pib.gov.in/PressReleasePage.aspx?PRID=2105745 — (Tier 1)
- [S3] 22nd Instalment of PM-KISAN; Prime Minister Shri Narendra Modi to Release 22nd Instalment on 13th March — https://www.pib.gov.in/PressReleasePage.aspx?PRID=2242295 ; https://www.pib.gov.in/PressReleseDetailm.aspx?PRID=2238588 — (Tier 1)
- [S4] Centre pushes States to speed up farm scheme fund release (article excerpt, The Hindu, 4 January 2026) — https://www.thehindu.com/todays-paper/2026-01-04/th_international/articleGDPFD3QIN-12986404.ece — (Tier 4)