Farmers’ pulse
Farmers' Pulse — UPSC Study Note
India's Pulse Economy: Production, MSP, Import Policy & Food Security
1. At a Glance
- Pulses (dal crops — tur/arhar, urad, masur, chana, moong) are India's primary non-cereal protein source, accounting for ~25% of non-cereal protein intake for the population. [S4]
- India is simultaneously the world's largest producer and largest importer of pulses — a structural paradox driven by a persistent demand-supply gap. [S4]
- ~5 crore farming families depend on pulse cultivation, yet the crop suffers from systematic underinvestment due to weak MSP procurement, rain-fed risk, and low yields. [S4]
- The topic straddles GS-III (Agriculture, food security, MSP policy) and GS-II (trade policy, India-US relations) — highly examinable in both Prelims and Mains. [S4]
2. Why in the News
- February 2026: The US claimed its bilateral trade deal with India obligated India to purchase pulses from American suppliers — framing it as a government commitment to import pulses against farmers' interests. [S4]
- This triggered political controversy in India, echoing the 2020–21 farm law protests, raising fears of a revival of farmer agitation. [S4]
- Budget 2025 announced 100% MSP procurement of tur, urad, and masur for four consecutive years (up to 2028–29) and raised the PM-AASHA guarantee from ₹45,000 crore to ₹60,000 crore. [S2]
- October 2025 (approx.): National Pulses Mission received Cabinet approval with a ₹11,440 crore allocation. [S3]
- March 2026: Agriculture Minister approved record procurement plans worth ₹15,095.83 crore for pulses and oilseeds for KMS 2025–26. [S3]
- NITI Aayog released a report on "Strategies and Pathways for Accelerating Growth in Pulses towards the Goal of Atmanirbharta." [S2]
3. Background & Evolution
| Year | Milestone |
|---|---|
| 2015–16 | Production falls to 16.35 MT; imports peak at ~6 MT (~29% import dependence) [S2] |
| 2018 | Government imposes import duties on pulses to protect domestic farmers |
| 2018 | PM-AASHA Scheme launched — integrating Price Support Scheme (PSS), Price Deficiency Payment Scheme (PDPS), and Private Procurement & Stockist Scheme (PPSS) [S1] |
| 2019–24 | PSS procurement fluctuates between 2.9% and 12.4% of production — inadequate floor support [S4] |
| 2022–23 | Production rises 59.4% to 26.06 MT; import dependence drops to 10.4% [S2] |
| 2024–25 | Government allows 100% state production procurement of tur, urad, masur under PSS [S1] |
| Budget 2025 | 100% procurement commitment extended 4 years to 2028–29; PM-AASHA ceiling raised to ₹60,000 crore [S2] |
| 2025–26 | Record procurement approval of ₹15,095.83 crore for pulses + oilseeds [S3] |
4. Core Static Facts
Definitions & Classifications - Pulses: Dry edible seeds of leguminous plants (Family: Fabaceae); nitrogen-fixing crops — improve soil fertility. - Kharif pulses: Tur (arhar), urad, moong — sown June–July, harvested Oct–Nov. - Rabi pulses: Chana (chickpea), masur (lentil) — sown Oct–Nov, harvested Mar–Apr. - MSP (Minimum Support Price): Administratively set floor price; not legally guaranteed for all crops. - Price Support Scheme (PSS): Component of PM-AASHA; NAFED/NCCF procure at MSP when market price falls below MSP.
Implementing Bodies - Nodal Ministry: Ministry of Agriculture & Farmers' Welfare (MoAFW) [S1] - Central Nodal Agencies (CNAs): NAFED (National Agricultural Cooperative Marketing Federation) and NCCF (National Cooperative Exports Limited) [S1] - Scheme umbrella: PM-AASHA (Pradhan Mantri Annadata Aay SanraksHan Abhiyan)
Key Numbers | Parameter | Figure | |---|---| | Annual pulse output (recent years) | ~2.5 crore tonnes (25 MT) [S4] | | Estimated annual demand | ~3 crore tonnes (30 MT) [S4] | | Gap filled by imports | ~5 MT [S4] | | Farmers supported | ~5 crore families [S4] | | PSS procurement fluctuation (2019–24) | 2.9%–12.4% of production [S4] | | PSS procurement growth (2009–14 vs. later) | 7,350% increase (1.52 LMT → 82.98 LMT) [S2] | | PM-AASHA guarantee (revised) | ₹60,000 crore [S2] | | KMS 2025–26 procurement approval | ₹15,095.83 crore [S3] | | National Pulses Mission allocation | ₹11,440 crore [S3] | | Self-sufficiency target year | 2027 (PM Modi's stated goal) [S2] | | Tur procured by March 2025 | 2.46 lakh MT (5 states; 1,71,569 farmers) [S2] |
Policy Instruments 1. MSP + PSS procurement (via NAFED/NCCF) 2. Import policy: Duty-free/concessional imports when domestic supply is tight 3. Buffer stock: Maintained by government for market price stabilisation 4. PM-AASHA: Integrated price support scheme (2018) 5. National Pulses Mission: ₹11,440 crore for R&D, seed systems, yield improvement [S3]
5. Multi-Dimensional Analysis
Economic
- Demand-supply gap of ~5 MT makes India structurally import-dependent despite being the world's largest producer — creating a price scissors problem: imports lower household spending but hurt farm gate prices. [S4]
- Pulse cultivation is predominantly rain-fed (75%+ area) — highly vulnerable to weather shocks, leading to price volatility and inflation spikes.
- India's pulse yields (~900 kg/ha) lag behind international competitors (Canada: ~1,800 kg/ha; Australia: ~1,500 kg/ha) — structural productivity deficit. [S4]
- Budget 2025 commitment (100% procurement for 4 years) aims to break the vicious cycle of underinvestment → low output → import dependence → low farm prices. [S2]
Social
- Pulses are the cheapest vegetable protein for India's lower-income population — critical for nutritional security of the poor.
- 5 crore farming families depend on pulse crops, predominantly in dryland/semi-arid regions (Madhya Pradesh, Maharashtra, Rajasthan, Karnataka, Telangana). [S4]
- Absence of reliable MSP procurement forces farmers to sell to private traders below MSP — transfers surplus to traders, not producers. [S4]
- Women farmers and marginal farmers (< 2 ha) disproportionately cultivate pulses on fragmented, rain-fed plots.
Geopolitical / Strategic
- US trade deal pressure (2026): US claim that India committed to purchasing American pulses (Canada is the largest supplier of lentils/masur) is geopolitically sensitive — it frames import policy as a sovereignty issue. [S4]
- India's top pulse import sources: Canada, Myanmar, Australia, USA — diversified but dependent.
- Atmanirbharta in pulses by 2027: Reducing import dependence is both an economic and a strategic objective — reduces foreign exchange outflow and trade leverage by partner countries. [S2]
- WTO rules constrain domestic procurement/subsidy architecture — any expansion of PSS must be WTO-compatible under the Agreement on Agriculture (AoA). [S5]
Environmental
- Pulses are nitrogen-fixing legumes — reduce synthetic fertilizer need, improving soil organic matter and reducing GHG emissions.
- Being predominantly rain-fed, pulse cultivation is acutely sensitive to monsoon variability and climate change — erratic rainfall triggers output crashes.
- Expansion of irrigated pulse area is a climate adaptation strategy but competes with water-intensive cereals.
Administrative / Governance
- Procurement centre gaps: Many states lack adequate PSS centres — farmers within 5 km of a centre can access MSP; others must sell to private traders. [S4]
- State-level variation: Procurement efficiency varies sharply — Maharashtra and Karnataka lag; AP and Telangana perform better. [S1]
- Moral hazard in import policy: A single central decision to allow duty-free imports immediately suppresses domestic prices — policymakers face a farmer vs. consumer trade-off with no political safety net. [S4]
- PSS procurement financed through Food Corporation of India (FCI) proxy via NAFED/NCCF but the disposal of procured stocks (offloading) remains problematic — overhang affects market price. [S2]
Legal / Constitutional
- MSP has no statutory backing — set administratively by CCEA (Cabinet Committee on Economic Affairs) on the recommendation of CACP (Commission for Agricultural Costs and Prices). Legalising MSP was a core demand during 2020–21 farm protests.
- Procurement under PSS is discretionary — unlike paddy/wheat under NFSA, pulses have no guaranteed offtake mandate.
- WTO Peace Clause (Bali 2013, extended Nairobi 2015): Allows India to exceed 10% subsidy cap for food security programmes — relevant for any expansion of pulse procurement subsidy.
6. Recent Developments (Last 12–18 Months)
- Feb 2026: US asserts its trade deal with India mandated pulse purchases from American suppliers — politically explosive claim; government pushed back. [S4]
- Mar 2026: Agriculture Minister approves record ₹15,095.83 crore procurement plan for pulses and oilseeds, KMS 2025–26. [S3]
- Jun 2025: Centre approves procurement of >1 lakh MT pulses and oilseeds for summer 2025–26. [S3]
- Budget 2025 (Feb 2025): 100% procurement of tur, urad, masur extended 4 years to 2028–29; PM-AASHA ceiling raised from ₹45,000 cr → ₹60,000 cr. [S2]
- Mar 2025: 2.46 lakh MT of tur (arhar) procured from 1,71,569 farmers across 5 states by NAFED/NCCF. [S2]
- Feb 2025: Cabinet approves continuation of PM-AASHA through the 15th Finance Commission cycle (up to 2025–26). [S1]
- Oct 2025 (approx.): National Pulses Mission receives Cabinet approval with ₹11,440 crore allocation. [S3]
- NITI Aayog report: Released paper on "Strategies and Pathways for Accelerating Growth in Pulses towards the Goal of Atmanirbharta." [S2]
7. Prelims Hooks
- India's annual pulse production ≈ 25 MT; demand ≈ 30 MT; gap of ~5 MT filled by imports. [S4]
- Pulses account for approximately one-quarter of India's non-cereal protein intake. [S4]
- PM-AASHA (Pradhan Mantri Annadata Aay SanraksHan Abhiyan) has three sub-schemes: PSS, PDPS, and PPSS. [S1]
- Central nodal agencies for pulse procurement under PSS: NAFED and NCCF (not FCI). [S1]
- PSS procurement of pulses between 2019–24 ranged from 2.9% to 12.4% of production — not a fixed floor. [S4]
- Budget 2025: 100% state production of tur, urad, masur to be procured for 4 years up to 2028–29. [S2]
- PM-AASHA MSP guarantee raised from ₹45,000 crore → ₹60,000 crore in Budget 2025. [S2]
- National Pulses Mission allocated ₹11,440 crore (Cabinet approval ~Oct 2025). [S3]
- KMS 2025–26 pulse + oilseed procurement approved at ₹15,095.83 crore. [S3]
- India's pulse import dependence fell from ~29% (2015–16) to ~10.4% (2022–23) — a 59.4% production rise. [S2]
- MSP has no statutory legal guarantee — determined by CCEA on CACP's recommendation. [S4]
- Pulses are nitrogen-fixing crops — a soil health benefit with relevance to fertilizer use reduction. [Tier-3 general]
- By March 2025, government procured 2.46 lakh MT of tur from 1,71,569 farmers in 5 states. [S2]
- Self-sufficiency target year for pulses set by PM Modi: 2027. [S2]
- WTO Peace Clause shields India's food-security-linked procurement subsidies from AoA's 10% cap. [S5]
8. Mains Relevance
GS Papers & Syllabus Mapping
| GS Paper | Syllabus Heading |
|---|---|
| GS-III | Agriculture — food security, MSP, input subsidies, agri-marketing |
| GS-III | Indian economy — trade policy, import duties, inflation management |
| GS-II | India's bilateral relations — India-US trade deal implications |
| GS-II | Government policies and interventions — PM-AASHA, National Pulses Mission |
Plausible Mains Questions
-
"India's pulse sector is caught in a policy trilemma between farmer income, consumer affordability, and import commitments. Critically examine the structural reforms needed to resolve this." (GS-III, 15 marks)
-
"The US claim that India committed to pulse imports under a bilateral trade deal has reignited the farm law protest debate. Analyse the geopolitical dimensions of India's pulse import policy and its implications for agricultural sovereignty." (GS-II/GS-III, 15 marks)
-
"Assess the effectiveness of PM-AASHA in providing a reliable price support mechanism for pulse farmers. What institutional changes are required for 100% MSP procurement to be operationally viable?" (GS-III, 10 marks)
9. Related Topics to Study Next
| Topic | Connection |
|---|---|
| PM-AASHA Scheme | Direct procurement mechanism for pulses; its three sub-components are examinable |
| Minimum Support Price (MSP) — Legal Guarantee Debate | Core demand of 2020–21 farm protests; directly relevant to pulse farmer distress |
| 2020–21 Farm Laws and Their Repeal | Political context for why import commitments are politically explosive |
| India-US Trade Relations (BTA 2025–26) | Source of the import obligation controversy; GS-II connection |
| Food Inflation Management in India | Government's trilemma: using imports to control dal prices vs. farm gate impact |
| National Food Security Act (NFSA), 2013 | Why pulses are excluded from guaranteed offtake unlike rice/wheat |
| WTO Agreement on Agriculture (AoA) & Peace Clause | Legal boundary for India's subsidy/procurement expansion |
| National Pulses Mission / NFSM-Pulses | Scheme for yield improvement and area expansion — complement to MSP policy |
10. Common Errors / Trap Areas
-
NAFED vs. FCI: FCI procures rice and wheat; NAFED and NCCF procure pulses and oilseeds under PSS. Conflating these is a common error.
-
PM-AASHA is not a procurement scheme alone: It has three sub-schemes — PSS (procurement), PDPS (price deficiency payment — cash transferred without physical procurement), and PPSS (private stockist). Only PSS involves physical grain purchase.
-
MSP is not legally guaranteed: MSP is administratively determined — there is no Act mandating farmers receive MSP. Conflating MSP policy with legal entitlement is a persistent error (legalising MSP was a demand, not an existing provision).
-
Production figure vs. procurement figure: India produces ~25 MT of pulses but procures only a fraction at MSP (historically 2.9%–12.4%). Do not confuse production with MSP-supported procurement.
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Kharif vs. Rabi pulse classification: Tur, urad, moong → Kharif; Chana, masur → Rabi. Questions may test which PSS procurement window applies to which crop.
11. Sources
- [S1] PIB — Empowering Indian Farmers / PM-AASHA continuation — https://www.pib.gov.in/PressNoteDetails.aspx?NoteId=154580&ModuleId=3 — (Tier 1)
- [S2] PIB — Minimum Support Prices: From Safety Net to Self-Sufficiency — https://www.pib.gov.in/PressReleasePage.aspx?PRID=2177219 — (Tier 1)
- [S3] National Pulses Mission / KMS 2025–26 procurement — via newsonair.gov.in & global-agriculture.com (secondary reports on Cabinet decisions) — (Tier 1 underlying; Tier 4 report)
- [S4] The Hindu BusinessLine — "Farmers' Pulse: Only structural reforms in agriculture sector can ensure food security" — 13 February 2026, p.10 — https://www.thehindu.com/todays-paper/2026-02-13/th_international/articleGO0FHRN5I-13529958.ece — (Tier 4, primary article)
- [S5] WTO Agreement on Agriculture & Peace Clause — https://www.wto.org — (Tier 2)
- [S6] PIB — NITI Aayog Report on Pulses Atmanirbharta — https://www.pib.gov.in/PressReleasePage.aspx?PRID=2163828 — (Tier 1)
Prepared for UPSC CSE Prelims + Mains. All statistics cross-referenced against PIB (Tier 1) and The Hindu BusinessLine primary article (Tier 4). Last updated: June 2026.