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What are the main bottlenecks in upstream and downstream process of marketing of agricultural products in India ?

Agricultural marketing refers to the entire process involved in moving farm produce from the farmer to the final consumer. In India, this system faces bottlenecks at both upstream (farm-level) and downstream (market-to-consumer) stages.

Fragmented Landholdings – 86% small and marginal farmers with low production volumes make aggregation difficult.

Poor First-Mile Connectivity – About 25% rural habitations lack pucca road connectivity – increases spoilage of perishables.

Lack of On-Farm Storage leads to distress sales. Eg- 166 MMT storage capacity gap (FAO)

Inadequate Primary Processing – Minimal grading, sorting, cleaning, and drying at the farm level

High Post-Harvest Losses – Losses of 6-18% in fruits & vegetables due to poor handling.

Weak Farmer Institutions – FPO/cooperatives have limited capacity for aggregation and marketing

Limited Access to Information – Farmers lack real-time data on prices, demand and arrivals.

High Input & Transport Costs makes farm-to-mandi movement expensive. Eg- logistics cost is 14% of GDP

Demand and supply gap due to Cobweb Phenomenon (Economic Survey) – Crop production depends on prices in previous periods rather than present demand

63% of agricultural households sold their crops to local markets and only 7.2% sold to APMCs.

APMC operating in monopolised silos limit free inter-state movement and competition. Eg- Licensing barriers and cartelisation

Dominance of Intermediaries leads to low price realisation. Eg- Farmers get only 25-30% of final price in perishables.

Inadequate Market Infrastructure – Mandis lack grading, sorting, storage, and drying yards. Only 10% of mandis meet required norms (Dalwai Committee).

Low Digital Integration – Only about 1500 mandis integrated with e-NAM (2024).

Quality & SPS Compliance Gaps – Inadequate testing infrastructure impacts domestic sales and exports. Eg- EU rejecting Mango consignment

Organised retail remains concentrated in metro and Tier-1 cities, with limited rural coverage

Low investment – Private investment <1% Agri-GDP.

Way Forward

Strengthening FPOs to enhance collective bargaining and direct market access for farmers. Eg- Sahyadri FPO in Maharashtra – increased incomes by 30%

Cold-Chain-as-a-Service (CCaaS) – IoT-based cold storage + logistics integration to reduce post-harvest losses

MSP 2.0 based on 3 D’s – Decentralisation, Diversification and Digital Procurement.

Rural Agri-Logistics Nodes under Gati Shakti Framework to develop cold chains, aggregation centers near farm gates.

Legal Reforms – Eg- adoption Model contract farming Act by states

Strengthening supply chain management is key to ‘Doubling Farmers Income’.

Agriculture Inputs