137x Filetype PPTX File size 1.37 MB Source: www.networkideas.org
Background • Value addition in Indian agriculture has been low as the level of processing in this sector has been poor • Ghosh, Bhandari and Sharma (2013) show extent of processing in Indian fruits and vegetables to be 1.7 percent and 2.4 percent respectively • Share of processing in advanced developing countries in these sectors vary between 30 to 50 percent. These shares are even higher for developed countries. Contract Farming in India • To improve value addition it is suggested that it is important to link agriculture production with the complete agriculture value chain • Contract farming is seen as a possible way of integration in the global value chain • Domestic and foreign companies are gradually getting into contract farming and sourcing more agricultural products from India • This has raised the question whether the unequal bargaining power between domestic farmers and large corporates will lead to exploitation of farmers Contract Farming in India • Contract farming can take various forms: • Examples: • procurement contracts under which only sale and purchase conditions are specified; • ITC Limited’ and tobacco • partial contracts wherein only some of the growers in Andhra Pradesh inputs are supplied by the contracting firm and produce is bought at pre-agreed prices; • Nestle India and dairy and farmers in Punjab • total contracts under which the contracting firm supplies and manages all the inputs on • Pepsico India and potato the farm and the farmer becomes just a growers in Gujarat, supplier of land and labour. Karnataka and West Bengal • In India, most contract farming • Pepsico India’s experiment arrangements are not backed by formal with tomato growers in contract agreements. Punjab, • These are implicit trading arrangements • ITC Limited’s arrangement between the buyer and the seller. with vegetable growers in Punjab Contract Farming as CSR • Project Unnati is a collaborative effort of • From the Project Unnati website: Coca-Cola with Jain Irrigation to build a • Project Unnati set to be a key sustainable supply chain for Coke's mango milestone towards the large scale beverage, Maaza. adoption of Ultra High Density farming Practice (UDHP) leveraging • The program offers financial support and drip irrigation imparts training on Ultra High Density • Introduction of Ultra High Density Plantation, a modern farming technique. Plantation will double the average mango yields • Project Unnati has the potential to improve the livelihoods of more than 50,000 farmers in the next five years • Farms under Project Unnati will also be used to showcase and train farmers on Ultra High Density Plantation under a joint capability building program led by Jain Irrigation and Coca-Cola University Some Preliminary Observations about contract farming • To understand how contract farming works we carried out a survey of potato farmers in West Bengal and Gujarat • In West Bengal potato farmers we surveyed are either contract farmers for Pepsico or they were doing non-contract farming • Both types of farming are being done almost side by side. Some farmers even do both contract and non-contract farming • In one of the regions surveyed, smaller farmers seemed more keen on contract farming than the medium farmers • In Gujarat we studied some large farmers who are contract farmers for an Indian company- Balaji Group
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