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Contact : +91 7053938407

Article Abstract

International Journal of Advance Research in Multidisciplinary, 2026;4(2):08-15

How effective have Maharashtra's agricultural market deregulation policies (e.g., easing APMC reforms for direct farmer-buyer sales) been in enhancing supply responsiveness and achieving long-term price stability for staple crops, weighed against risks of farmer income volatility?

Author : Anaiah Gadhia

Abstract

Maharashtra's agricultural market deregulation, via the Model APMC Act 2003 and 2016 amendments enabling direct farmer-buyer sales and delisting of fruits/vegetables, sought to enhance supply responsiveness and long-term price stability for staples like rice, wheat, and pulses. This abstract assesses effectiveness using secondary data from economic surveys and reform studies (2005–2025), analyzing price volatility, incomes, and efficiencies in districts like Nashik and Pune.

Results show modest supply gains: cereal cropped areas rose from 23.90 lakh ha (2020-21) to 24.67 lakh ha (2023-24), aided by e-NAM (136 mandis linked) and shorter chains via retailers like Reliance Fresh, cutting post-harvest losses by 10–15% and boosting farm-gate prices 5–15%. Yet, food CPI fluctuated 4.5–6.0% (2024), hampered by monsoons and shocks, limiting long-term stability.

Farmer income volatility endures, with 37% trader-dependent amid credit gaps; marginal farms (84.5%) suffer distress sales despite APMCs handling 75% vegetable trade (₹48,000 crore at Vashi). Reforms spurred competition but neglected inclusion, revealing efficiency-equity trade-offs. Hybrid APMC-digital models are recommended for sustainability.

Keywords

APMC reforms, supply responsiveness, price stability, staple crops, farmer income volatility, market deregulation, post-harvest losses, and Maharashtra agriculture