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How to resolve the problems faced by Indian Agri Markets?

Indian buyers can verify their distance from the crop and the farmer they want to contact on the Book My Crop website. This enables buyers to gain a better understanding of the location, and crop availability in terms of quantity, land size, and cultivation data, and to make the best purchasing decision possible. If you are looking for an excellent place other than the Krishi market, Krishi bazaar, and Kisan mandi to buy agricultural products, Book My Crop is the right choice for you.

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How to resolve the problems faced by Indian Agri Markets?

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  1. How to resolve the problems faced by Indian Agri Markets? India is a predominantly agricultural nation, yet the offline as well as online agri markets including Krishi market, Krishi bazaar as well as Kisan mandi have been subpar. Despite their efforts, Indian farmers are still being taken advantage of by middlemen who refuse to pay fair prices for their goods. Check out a few points listed by Book My Crop that can certainly help in improving the current situation of Indian Agri Markets. How to resolve the problems faced by Indian Agri Markets? 1.Dispensing with Intermediaries: Because the farmer cannot get a good price for his product unless he can sell directly to the consumer, eliminating middlemen is crucial for agricultural marketing. Therefore, 'consumer grain centres' should be set up where the farmer can directly sell his agriculture products online to the consumer, cutting out the middleman.

  2. 2.Using a Common Weighing System: The government should produce and coordinate the use of standard weights in order to improve agricultural marketing. For there to be no marketing fraud, a stringent disciplinary mechanism should be put in place for anyone who reports a problem with the weights. The marketing system would be strengthened, and traders' fraudulent behaviour would be curbed. 3.Access to better Loan or Credit Facilities: Well-off persons, moneylenders, etc., who operate in rural areas, provide loans to farmers and profit off of their labour. This issue can be resolved if the government sets up cooperative societies, banks, as well as other financial entities. The farmers belonging to the rural areas should also be urged to save and make wise purchases so that they have access to funds in times of need. This would prevent farmers from selling their goods too cheaply and eating into their profits. 4.Changes in Transportation Methods: The transportation infrastructure is the backbone of the agricultural marketing system. So, these roads need to be built in rural areas that are accessible year- round. Bullock carts, diesel or police trucks, and tractors built out of tyres should be readily available in the country. Similarly, improvements in rail and water transport are required to facilitate the distribution of agricultural goods, particularly grains and other perishables. 5.Market Policies’ Awareness: In order to inform the relevant parties of the realities of agricultural marketing, adequate arrangements are required to be made for the passing on the approved pricing of agricultural produce and quantity of production, etc. 6.Training Facilities: It is imperative that proper arrangements be made for the training of staff associated with marketing administration in order to boost agricultural marketing. It is crucial that those involved in agricultural marketing receive training on the topic of the controlled markets’ system as well as other related topics. 7.Regulation of ‘Mandis’: To provide a fair price to the farmers for their produce in the mandis, ‘organized mandis’ should be established by the government, and appropriate arrangements

  3. should be made in these mandi markets for weighting, storage, and transport, as well as selling agriculture products online etc. 8.Statistical Analysis of the Market: The Indian government should create a Marketing and Inspection Directorate to conduct regular market surveys, publishing relevant data on the distribution system, consumption, production, standardisation, demand price level, export, etc. 9.Inventory Control: The Indian government saw the need for a centralised storage facility, thus they created The All India Storage Corporation. Cooperative societies are tasked with organising the store system, and the goal of this business is to open convenience stores in rural areas. In this regard, they receive both extra financial and technical support. Buy agriculture products online from Book My Crop (BMC) to eliminate all the middlemen and get your desired products at the most reasonable price possible, as you’ll be buying directly from the farmer. 10.Standardization and Categorization of the Products: Despite the passage of the Agricultural Production Act in 1937, which was intended to standardise agricultural goods, there has been no noticeable progress in this area. Establishing labs is crucial to developing a reliable system for scaling upgrading and quality control activities. Provisional laboratories were set up in Calcutta, Kanpur, Madras, Mumbai, Amritsar, as well as Rajkot, with the understanding that they would eventually be relocated to minor communities outside of the major cities.

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