23 अप्रैल 2013
PMEAC pegs 3.5 pc farm growth in FY'14 on normal monsoon
New Delhi, Apr 23. Agriculture and allied sector is
expected to grow at a faster rate of 3.5 per cent in 2013-14
fiscal if the country receives normal monsoon this year,
the Prime Minister's economic advisory panel said today.
The sector's growth pegged for this year is higher than
1.8 per cent estimated for 2012-13 fiscal by the Central
Statistical Organisation (CSO). The estimate for 2012-13 is
certain to be revised and it is likely that final growth
number may not exceed 2 per cent, it said.
"Under the circumstances, and in expectation of normal or
mostly normal rainfall, we have projected the farm sector to
grow by 3.5 per cent (in 2013-14)," Prime Minister's Economic
Advisory Council (PMEAC) Chairman C Rangarajan said in the
Economic Review for 2012-13.
However, if 2013 monsoon turns out to be significantly
below normal, even that may be harder to achieve, he said.
Monsoon rains are crucial for the farm sector, which
contributes about 15 per cent to the country's GDP, as only 40
per cent of the total cultivable area is under irrigation.
Last week, Agriculture Minster Sharad Pawar had said that
the India Meteorological Department (IMD) is expecting a
normal monsoon in 2013. IMD's first monsoon forecast will be
officially released on April 26.
According to the PMEAC, the growth estimated for 2013-14
fiscal is slightly lower than the average of the Eleventh Plan
(2007-12) period and comparatively slightly lower base of
2012-13 should be achievable.
To boost farm sector growth, the PMEAC has suggested
major reforms in agricultural marketing and supply chains.
"In order to meet the increased demand for perishable
farm produce - vegetables, fruit, eggs, meat and fish - at a
stable price that is rewarding to both the farmer and the
consumer, the supply chain needs to be modernised and
regulatory obstacles in the way cleared," it said.
The linkage to managing primary food inflation in this
regard is self-evident, the report said.
The current Agricultural Produce Marketing Committee Act
(APMC Act) in a number of states limits the freedom of farmers
to sell, and this has prevented the modernisation of the
supply chain.
This has often denied farmers a decent price, and
increased it excessively for the urban consumer, besides
sustaining wasteful practices, the PMEAC report said.
Analysing the performance of the farm sector in the last
year, the PMEAC said the sector growth may not exceed two per
cent because inadequate rainfall in the country, especially
in Maharashtra and Gujarat, has reduced the output of coarse
cereals and some other crops.
It is reported that horticulture output in 2012-13 was
also a bit weaker than in the previous year, it added.
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