Aim to double farmers' income by 2022 to tackle suicides: Govt to SC

Update: 2017-08-28 17:10 GMT
New Delhi: The Centre has told the Supreme Court that it aims to double the income of farmers by 2022 to tackle suicides among them.
The Ministry of Agriculture also proposed to make special efforts to ensure adequate flow of credit in under-serviced areas, eastern states and Jammu and Kashmir.
"It is submitted that the government is addressing the low income of the farmers. Agrarian distress as manifest from large number of farmers living below poverty line and unfortunate incidents of suicides can be addressed by enabling farmers to increase their income.
"With this understanding, the government is targeting to double the income of farmers by 2022. To achieve this, department of agriculture, cooperation and farmers' welfare has constituted an inter ministerial committee to examine various dimensions of farmers' income and to recommend an appropriate strategy," the status report said.
The matter was listed before a bench of justices M B Lokur and Deepak Gupta which took on record the status report in which the government said it was implementing and promoting schemes to reduce cost of cultivation in order to realise net positive returns for farmers and the National Policy for Farmers (NPF), 2007 was also being reviewed by it.
The report, which came on a PIL filed by Punjab-based NGO Youth Kamal Organization, through its president G S Happy Mann, seeking steps to prevent farmers' suicides, said "a plan of action was prepared by an inter-ministerial committee set up by the government for operationalisation of NPF, 2007."
"After carefully analysing the differential between the action points as contained in the NPF and action already taken by the government, the committee prepared a plan of action and identified 201 action points, where action was to be taken," it said.
It said that as of now, out of 201 action points only nine action points remain for further action.
"This (inter-ministerial) committee has also been entrusted to review the NPF, 2007 which would also include the unresolved nine action points."
The report said that in order to increase production, the government was implementing schemes such as National Food Security Mission (NFSM), National Mission for Oilseed and Oil Palm (NMOOP), Mission of Integrated Development for Horticulture (MIDH), National Mission on Agricultural Extension and Technology (NMAET) and Rashtriya Krishi Vikas Yojana (RKVY).
It further told the court that in Budget 2017-18, the government has increased the target for agricultural credit to "a record level of Rs 10 lakh crore from Rs nine lakh crore allocated during previous financial year."
"Government will make special efforts to ensure adequate flow of credit to the under serviced areas, the eastern states and Jammu and Kashmir," the report said.

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