Eco PPT Personal
Eco PPT Personal
Eco PPT Personal
Economics
Yash Dhir
11 ‘H’ ROLL NO. : 36
ACKNOWLEDGEMENT
I would like to express my special thanks of gratitude to my Economics teacher
(Anu ma’am) who gave me this golden opportunity for doing this project and
also provided support in completing my project.
Yash Dhir
11 ‘H’
Index
To be noted that:
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*index will filled once the project (hard copy) is ready in the following format
given below in the attached picture.
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A bumper crop is a large crop of agricultural produce that has been
produced under optimal, yet rare, conditions, such as abundant rainfall, a
mild spring, an unseasonably long summer, an unexplainable lack of pest
infections, or a mild, frost-free autumn.
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by the government, are purchased at the MSP. The amount of the course
collected from the farmers is always according the Target Public Distribution
System (TPDS).
If a farmer gets better price at the market he can sell those crops directly in the
market to private traders.
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It also benefits the end users since they are able to get the food products
at affordable prices and able to reduce their food expenses.
The food inflation is also under control because of rise in food grain
production.
CASE STUDY 1:
Take the case of Ashok Kumar, a
farmer of Baghpat’s Malakhpur
village. He started using the seed
{CO-0238} in 2017 and saw a 25 per
cent rise in the yield in the very first
year. In 2015-16, the new variety
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was sown in a little over 0.4 million hectare (ha) in Uttar Pradesh and by
2017-18 the acreage increased threefold, to 1.21 million ha, as per
Lucknow-based Indian Institute of Sugarcane Research (IISR). Not only
does the seed have a higher yield, the recovery percentage of sugar from
it is also higher than the other varieties. Sugarcane production,
consequently, saw quantum jump. According to the Uttar Pradesh Cane
Development and Sugar
Industry Department,
sugarcane production in the
state increased from 148.7
million tonnes in 2016-17 to
182.1 million tonnes in 2017-
18. The sugar production by
mills also went up across the
country, due to which the sugar prices plummeted so much that the sugar
mills in India cumulatively owe Rs 22,000 crore to farmers for cane
supplied in 2017-18.
Q1. Was the bumper production boon or bane for Ashok Kumar?
Q2. What was the main reason for the bumper production?
Q3. What can be done to make the sugar mills pay the money back to
their creditors i.e. the farmers?
Q4. Why is the recovery rate of this variety of sugar? Because of the:
a) Seed
b) Soil
c) Weather
Q5. The production of sugarcane in U.P. increased 147 million tonnes in
2016-17 to _______ in 2017-18
a) 181.2 million tonnes
b) 182.1 million tonnes
c) 128.2 million tonnes
CASE STUDY 2:
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Ammar Zaidi, a farmer of Hardoi district’s Pihani village, says, “The
government has declared that the average yield in Hardoi is 755 quintal/hectare
(1 quintal equals 0.1 tonne) whereas I produced 1,200 quintal per hectare. Since
I cannot sell it to mills or in the open market, what will I do with it?” In such
cases, farmers illegally sell it to those who have “supply tickets” {Every season,
a district-level government officer surveys the sugarcane produced and,
depending upon the number and capacity of sugar mills in the area, gives a
“supply ticket” to every farmer denoting the name of the mill and the quantity
of sugarcane the farmer is supposed to supply to the mill. After the crushing
season is over, the mill is supposed to transfer the money to farmers’ bank
accounts within 14 days, failing which it should pay 15 per cent interest
annually on the amount, says the Union government’s Sugarcane Control Order
of 1966 }. “This will lead to black-marketing of sugarcane,” says Zaidi.
Q1. What is the effect of the supply ticket system on the farmers?
Q2. What can be done to make it possible for every farmer to have a
supply ticket?
Q3. What are your views
on the average yield
amount declared by the
government in Hardoi?
Q4. What is the average
yield in Hardoi declared
by the government?
a) 755 quintal/ hectare
b) 765 quintal/ hectare
c) 755 hectare/ quintal
CASE STUDY 3:
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THIS YEAR LAST YEAR
PROFIT
PROFIT
INPUT INPUT
Case study 5:
During normal conditions, farmers manage their produce by
dividing it between self-consumption, using it as seeds for future
cultivation, selling it at the Minimum Support Price (MSP) under
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the procurement schemes or in the Agricultural Produce Market
Committee (APMC) markets. But, the situation changes
significantly when good monsoon results in a bumper harvest.
When output increases by 10 per cent, prices collapse by more than
10 per cent and consequently the income from the crop for the
producer falls.
However, the fall in prices due to bumper harvest is not passed on
to the consumers. Somewhere between the consumer and the
producer, the effect of this fall is absorbed as larger profits by the
middlemen.
As and when a bumper harvest occurs, large quantities of produce
arrive in quick succession; government agencies are unable procure
the excess production as they are constrained by limited buying
capacity.
Q1. Do you agree that a few government policies play a role in making a
bumper harvest bane for the farmers?
Q2. Is a bumper harvest a boon or bane for the consumers/public?
Q3. What measures can be taken in order to give the profits earned to the
farmers and not to the middlemen?
What is the
conclusion
of a bumper
production?
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In most cases, a bumper crop is a boon to the farmer. They grow more in order
to increase the income from the sale. The availability of transport, demand of
that crop, storage facility availability, etc. also play an important in increasing
the income. As he is not the only one having a bumper production of that crop.
So, if the farmer’s crop is successful in reaching the market on time then there
are more chances to receiving a higher return. Most of the farmers do not
prepare well enough for the storage and the transportation of the goods.
Bibliography:
1. www.maximumyield.com
2. www.Krishijagran.com
3. www.Indiatimes.com
4. www.bbc.com
5. www.thehindubusinessline.com
6.
https://pib.gov.in/newsite/PrintRelease.aspx?relid=159425
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