A National Market for Agricultural
Commodities- Some Issues and the
Way Forward
8.1 INTRODUCTION
atpresent, markets in agricultural out come are
regulated under the Agricultural out come Market
Committee (APMC) Act approve by State
Governments. There are about 2477 principal
regulated markets based on geography (the
APMCs) and 4843 sub-market yards regulated
by the respective APMCs in India. A National Market for Agricultural
India has not one, not 29 but thousands of
agricultural markets. This Act notifies agricultural
product produced in the region such as
cereals, pulses, edible oilseed, fruits and vegetables
and even chicken, goat, sheep, sugar, fish etc.,
and provides that first sale in these artfact
can be manage only under the aegis of the
APMC through the commission agents licensed
by the APMCs set up under the Act. The typical
convanastion available in or around the APMCs are:
auction halls, weigh bridges, godowns, shops for
retailers, canteens, roads, lights, drinking water,
police station, post-office, bore-wells,
warehouse, farmers amenity center, tanks,
Water Treatment plant, soil-testing Laboratory,
toilet blocks, etc. Various taxes, fees/charges and
cess levied on the trades conducted in the Mandis
are also notified under the Act
8.2 APMCS LEVY MULTIPLE FEES, OF
SUBSTANTIAL MAGNITUDE, THAT ARE NONTRANSPARENT, AND HENCE A SOURCE OF
POLITICAL POWER
Tables 8.1-8.3 convey a sense of the magnitudes
and abudannce of fees arising from the operation
of the APMCs. They charge a market fee of
buyers, and they charge a licensing fee from the
commissioning agents who mediate between
buyers and farmers. They also charge small
licensing fees from a whole range of functionaries
(warehousing agents, loading agents etc.). In
addition, commissioning agents charge
commission fees on transactions between buyers
and farmers.
The levies and other market charges imposed by
states vary widely. Statutory levies/mandi tax,
VAT etc. are a major source of market distortion.
Such high level of taxes at the first level of trading
have significant cascading effects on the prices
as the commodity passes through the supplychain.
118 Economic Survey 2014-15
Table 8.1: Taxes/ Levies/Interest Charges/ Incidentals
etc.as % of MSP on procurement of Rice/
Paddy in KMS 2013-14 and price after Tax
Taxes/ Price
levies/ after
Interest tax over
Charges/ MSP
Incidentals (` 1310/
etc. (%) qtl.)
1 Andhra Pradesh* 19.5 1565.45
2 Bihar 6.5 1395.15
3 Chhattisgarh** 9.7 1437.07
4 Gujarat 3.5 1355.85
5 Haryana 11.5 1460.65
6 Jharkhand 3.5 1355.85
7 Karnataka 4 1362.4
8 Madhya Pradesh 4.7 1371.57
9 Maharashtra 3.55 1356.51
10 Odisha*** 15.5 1513.05
11 Punjab 14.5 1499.95
12 Rajasthan 3.6 1357.16
13 Uttar Pradesh 9 1427.9
14 Uttarakhand 9 1427.9
15 West Bengal 3 1349.3
* Mkt. Fee=1%, VAT=5%, Driage=1%, RD Cess= 5%
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