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2. Outline of presentation
5. YES Bank – An Introduction
6. A Differentiated Approach to Banking
10. Agriculture in India Burgeoning Population of over 1.1 billion
Agriculture in the livelihood of about 60% of the population
11. Indian Agriculture Scenario STRENGTHS
Rich Bio-diversity
Arable land
Climate
Political
OPPORTUNITIES
Horticulture
Dairy
Retail
Exports / Agro-based Industry WEAKNESS
Fragmentation of land
Low Technology Inputs
Unsustainable Water Mgmt
Poor Infrastructure
Low value addition
THREATS
Unsustainable Resource Use
Unsustainable Regional Development
Imports
12. Indian Agriculture
Unique socio-economic & political fabric- government plays a key role within the agriculture sector.
Agricultural initiatives have been predominantly driven & supported as the realm of the public sector
Increased interest and participation from the private sector in recent years.
13. Progress: Indian Agriculture has made rapid strides since Independence From food shortages and import to self-sufficiency and exports.
From subsistence farming to significant intensive and technology led cultivation.
Today , India is the front ranking producer of many crops in the world.
Ushered in through the green, white, blue and yellow revolutions
Green Revolution: 1967 - 1978 - Exponential increase in yield - largely technology driven and built through a three pronged focus:
Increasing the area under cultivation;
Double-cropping existing farmland;
Using seeds with improved genetics.
Solidly in collboration with US – Seed technology and Land Grant Pattern of Developing Indian Agri Universities
14. Governance: India & US Agriculture Sector in India and United States have to be viewed in their distinct context and cannot be compared.
However both share a federal governance structure
Governance being at the Centre and State
US - Strong institutional frameworks - Some Principles & innovations adaptable to an Indian Context
Opportunity to collaborate Govt-Govt, Govt-Private, Private-Private
Innovation & Knowledge sharing
15. Institutional & Governance Reform Green revolution -largely technology driven;
Next revolution in Indian Agriculture - Institutional Reform
This is the foundation to addressing many of the challenges in the sector
Shift from the commodity centric approach of the past to projectization approach : Enhancing Bank ability within the agribusiness sector.
Public-Private Partnership - institutional innovation mechanisms – adaptation/mapping of successful principles from infrastructure
Recognize innovations in public policy to enable scaling up as a mass development model.
Linkage of farmers with markets, within the ambit of agribusiness
Recognize & Facilitate the important contribution of the private sector - bringing in Innovation, Investment, Technology & Expertise.
17. Credit Availability is a key-priority, and in most countries it is supplemented and/or subsidized by the government
Banks perceive agriculture as less attractive component of their portfolio
The United States has evolved Institutional structures to incentivize, direct & progressively meet any deficit for credit to agriculture sector
An alternative to supplement the regulatory stipulations such as priority sector lending norms
18. Indian Agriculture … Integration of all the links in the Food Value Chain from the Farm Gate to the Food plates would make Agribusiness competitive.
Demand for quality and value added products and inadequate Agri Infrastructure offers investment opportunities at each stage of Food Chain.
19.
20. Transition from Agriculture to Agribusiness
21. Processing : Value Addition Much of the fruits and vegetable produce is sold as fresh products.
Processing accounts for only small portion of agricultural value.
Wastage levels are extremely high.
Improved post harvest interventions: price support mechanism, grading, handling, storage, packaging, marketing, processing.
22. Investment Opportunity R&D; Collaborations
Inputs & Technology – High Yield Seeds, Soil Treatment etc.
Mechanization – tractors, sprinkler irrigation etc,
High Value Agriculture : Horticulture, Dairy, Meat Products.
Skill Development: Technology Adoption, Practical Training & Capacity Building
25. India witnessing unprecedented changes in demographic and economic profile…..
26. …….likely to have strong bearing on food demand Increased consumer discern for quality and hygiene – pushing India up the food demand curve
27. On the other hand supply trends indicate stagnation …
28. with serious challenges to supply chain efficiency Fragmented Land holdings
Poor market orientation
Low productivity & marketable surplus
29. These trends are likely to lead to a supply – demand gap in the near future
30. Requiring focus on high impact solutions to mitigate the mismatch
31. Indian Government has been playing a significant role to combat food security challenges
32. The Industry has taken some path-breaking initiatives to augment food supplies & develop agri-infrastructure Case Study 1: FCI & Adani partnership for Logistics
33. Case study 2: Integrated Agro Food Park
Unique first of its kind integration of various agribusiness value chain components.
Spatial combination of agro-processing and non-agro functions (building, industrial estate or region).
Scale in production further enable industrial processing.
34. Case study 2: Integrated Agro Food Park (cont’d)
35. Opportunities for private participation Partnering with Public sector for
Commercialization of agricultural research
Extension and Knowledge transfer
Farm inputs sector
Slow release fertilizers
Specialty agrochemicals
Hybrid and GM seeds
Micro-irrigation
Processing and value addition of perishables
Fruits & Vegetables
Milk products
Development of agricultural infrastructure
Modern Terminal Markets
Food Parks
Logistics and warehousing
Building efficient post harvest supply chains
36. Thank You