Key Points

The Modi cabinet has approved a major agriculture scheme to enhance productivity in 100 districts. With Rs 24,000 crore allocated annually, it aims to benefit 1.7 crore farmers through better irrigation and storage. The program builds on the success of the Aspirational Districts initiative. Progress will be tracked using 117 performance indicators for maximum impact.

Key Points: Modi Cabinet Approves Rs 24,000 Crore Dhan-Dhaanya Krishi Yojana for Farmers

  • Rs 24,000 crore annual outlay for 6 years
  • Targets 100 low-productivity districts
  • Integrates 36 existing schemes
  • Aims for self-reliance in agriculture
3 min read

Cabinet approves 6-year programme to improve agriculture productivity in 100 districts

New agriculture scheme to boost productivity in 100 districts, benefiting 1.7 crore farmers with improved irrigation, storage, and credit facilities.

"This programme will help 1.7 crore farmers – Union Minister Ashwini Vaishnaw"

New Delhi, July 16

Prime Minister Narendra Modi-chaired Union Cabinet, in a meeting on Wednesday, approved the Prime Minister Dhan-Dhaanya Krishi Yojana, which was initially announced in the Budget for 2025-26.

The scheme aims to enhance agricultural productivity, increase crop diversification and sustainable agricultural practices, augment post-harvest storage, improve irrigation facilities and facilitate availability of credit. This programme will help 1.7 crore farmers, Union Minister Ashwini Vaishnaw told reporters today after the weekly Cabinet meeting. A financial outlay of Rs 24,000 crore will be earmarked per year, at least for 6 years starting 2025-26.

Motivated by the success of the Aspirational Districts Programme, Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman had on February 1 proposed that the government will undertake a 'Prime Minister Dhan-Dhaanya Krishi Yojana' in partnership with states.

It is in pursuance of Budget announcement for 2025-26 to develop 100 districts under "Prime Minister Dhan-Dhaanya Krishi Yojana". The Scheme will be implemented through convergence of 36 existing schemes across 11 Departments, other State schemes and local partnerships with the private sector.

100 districts will be identified based on three key indicators of low productivity, low cropping intensity, and less credit disbursement. The number of districts in each state/UT will be based on the share of Net Cropped Area and operational holdings. However, a minimum of 1 district will be selected from each state.

Committees will be formed at District, State and National level for effective planning, implementation and monitoring of the Scheme. A District Agriculture and Allied Activities Plan will be finalized by the District Dhan Dhaanya Samiti, which will also have progressive farmers as members. The District Plans will be aligned to the national goals of crop diversification, conservation of water and soil health, self-sufficiency in agriculture and allied sectors as well as expansion of natural and organic farming. Progress of the Scheme in each Dhan-Dhaanya district will be monitored on 117 key Performance Indicators through a dashboard on monthly basis. NITI will also review and guide the district plans. Besides Central Nodal Officers appointed for each district will also review the scheme on a regular basis.

As the targeted outcomes in these 100 districts will improve, the overall average against key performance indicators will rise for the country. The scheme will result in higher productivity, value addition in agriculture and allied sector, local livelihood creation and hence increase domestic production and achieving self-reliance (Atmanirbhar Bharat). As the indicators of these 100 districts improve, the national indicators will automatically show an upward trajectory

- ANI

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Reader Comments

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Sarah B
As someone working in agricultural development, I'm cautiously optimistic. The convergence of 36 schemes sounds ambitious - implementation will be key. The dashboard monitoring is a good step for transparency. Hope they involve local farmers meaningfully, not just as token members.
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Ananya R
₹24,000 crore per year is huge money! But will it actually help small farmers or just benefit agri-businesses? We've seen many schemes fail due to corruption. The government must ensure strict monitoring at ground level. Organic farming focus is good though 🌱
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Vikram M
Good initiative but implementation is everything. My village in Maharashtra still hasn't seen benefits from previous schemes. Hope this time they select districts fairly, not just based on political considerations. The credit facility part is most needed - banks treat farmers like beggars!
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Kavya N
Why only 100 districts? India has 700+ districts! While the focus is good, many deserving areas might be left out. Also, hope they consider women farmers properly - we do 70% of farm work but get ignored in such schemes. The committee must have women representatives.
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Michael C
The emphasis on sustainable practices and water conservation is commendable. India's groundwater crisis is alarming. If this can promote drip irrigation and reduce water-guzzling crops, it will be revolutionary. The 6-year commitment shows long-term thinking - rare in politics!

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