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


2. Why in the News


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

Administrative / Governance

Social

Legal / Constitutional

Ethical / Governance

Historical


6. Recent Developments (Last 12–18 Months)


7. Prelims Hooks

  1. PM-KISAN launched on: 24 February 2019 at Gorakhpur, Uttar Pradesh. [S1]
  2. Annual income support under PM-KISAN: ₹6,000 per eligible farmer family. [S1]
  3. Instalment structure: 3 instalments of ₹2,000 each, disbursed via DBT. [S2]
  4. Funding pattern: 100% Central Government (Central Sector Scheme — not Centrally Sponsored). [S1]
  5. Implementing Ministry: Ministry of Agriculture & Farmers' Welfare (not Ministry of Finance). [S1]
  6. Mandatory conditions for eligibility: Land seeding on PM-KISAN portal + Aadhaar-seeded bank account + eKYC completion. [S2]
  7. Administrative cost support to States: 0.125% of instalment amount; ₹265.64 crore released as of Aug 2025. [S2]
  8. Cumulative disbursement through 20 instalments (Aug 2025): >₹3.70 lakh crore. [S2]
  9. 22nd instalment: Released 13 March 2026 at Guwahati, Assam; ₹18,640 crore to ~9.32 crore farmers. [S3]
  10. Budget allocation for PM-KISAN (2026-27): ₹60,000 crore. [S3]
  11. Largest beneficiary State (18th instalment): Uttar Pradesh (~2.25 crore farmers). [S1]
  12. Legal basis for Aadhaar-seeding requirement: Aadhaar Act, 2016 (Targeted Delivery of Financial and Other Subsidies, Benefits and Services). [S2]
  13. PM-KISAN is a Central Sector Scheme — States are implementation partners but do not contribute funds. [S1]
  14. 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

  1. "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)
  2. "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)
  3. "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

  1. 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.

  2. 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.).

  3. 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.

  4. 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.

  5. 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