🚨 Self-Reliant Agriculture: Dream or Reality? 🚨
India is the world’s largest producer and consumer of pulses. The government repeatedly promises doubling farmers’ income and achieving self-reliant agriculture, but ground realities show a very different picture.
---
⚡ MSP vs Import Reality ⚡
🌱 Toor (Arhar)
MSP: ₹8,000 / qtl
Import: ₹4,500 -5100 from African origin
6000 from Myanmar origin
Domestic Price: ₹5,500
🌱 Urad
MSP: ₹7,800
Import: ₹6,900
Domestic Price: ₹6,400
🌱 Masoor
MSP 2025: ₹6,700 | Import: ₹4900
Estimated MSP 2026: ₹7,000
🌱 Chana
MSP 2025: ₹5,650 | Import: ₹5,000
Estimated MSP 2026: ₹6,000
👉 Clearly, domestic prices are trading up to 25% below MSP, while imports are flooding in at 30–40% cheaper.
---
⚠️ Rising Imports – The Threat ⚠️
1️⃣ Farmers losing confidence in MSP
2️⃣ Small traders, millers, processors being pushed out
3️⃣ Only multinational corporations will dominate the trade
4️⃣ Farmers will be reduced to mere puppets in their hands
---
🇮🇳 What the Government Must Do 🇮🇳
✅ Enforce Quantitative Restrictions (QRs) on imports
✅ Implement Minimum Import Price (MIP) immediately
✅ Put a ban on pea imports to prevent further market imbalance
---
🔴 Conclusion 🔴
The time to act is NOW.
If corrective measures are not taken, India’s entire pulses industry will soon be under the grip of a handful of multinational companies.
👉 The dream of self-reliant agriculture will remain only on paper.
Once a trader, always a trader.
There is no looking back, no return.
You fail, you try, you fail again, you try again...
giving up is not an option.......
......and one day you will succeed...
Mark my words!
Tax Planning is very important to optimize tax outgo!
Hindu Undivided Family(HUF) is a good option that is available for all married persons
What is HUF? How to create it?
A thread🧵on HUF,how to create HUF and its benefits?
Lets go👇
World production #durum wheat is at a century low, yet the price is falling. Why? My guess is that although consumption has been falling for a number of years, it is still overestimated. Soft wheat has replaced durum wheat to a significant amount, due to the price differential