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October 07, 2019

Why in News?

  • Punjab government has directed all government procurement agencies to link the bank accounts of farmers with the Public Finance Management System (PFMS) portal.
  • This has angered the ‘Arhatiyas’ (commission agents), a large number of whom want the government to roll back its decision.

What is the PFMS portal?

  • It is an online platform developed and implemented by the office of the Controller General of Accounts (CGA) under the Union Ministry of Finance.
  • The PFMS portal is used to make direct payments to beneficiaries of government schemes.
  • The idea is to monitor the accounts of farmers to ensure they get the payment for their crops from the ‘Arhatiyas’.
  • The Arhatiyas pay farmers only after selling their produce and receiving the money from the buyers.

Why are arhatiyas against it?

  • The Food and Civil Supplies Department has announced that,
  1. If accounts are not linked with the PFMS portal, the arhatiyas’ commission (2.5%) and the administrative charges, would not be released.
  • Government agencies have asked the arhatiyas to provide the account details of farmers.
  • The arhatiyas have claimed that the farmers are not willing to share the account details.
  • Government is underlining the need to bring transparency into the system but the arhatiyas are wary of monitoring.
  • They also fear that the linking of farmers’ accounts to the PFMS making payments directly to farmers, will cut agents all together.

What were the early initiative?

  • Earlier government had launched a ‘direct payment’ scheme under ‘The Punjab Agriculture Market Act’.
  • Under the act,  the farmers were asked to fill in a form to receive payments directly for their crop sold to government agencies.
  • The Ministry for Consumer Affairs, had asked Punjab to take the procurement system online, especially for wheat and paddy.
  • The Centre had argued that arhatiyas’ commission and mandi labour costs in Punjab were higher than in other states.
  • Neither of these efforts were, however, successful.
  • The procurement system in Punjab remains largely in the hands of arhatiyas.
  • They receive payments in their accounts and then pay farmers by cheques or cash, with no records.
  • State agencies have no record of payments in the ‘J’ form, made to individual farmers.

What do the farmers themselves want?

  • A majority of farmers want to link their accounts with the PFMS portal and prefer direct payments in their accounts.
  • Most of the main farmers’ organisations, whose memberships running into lakhs, are against the arhatiya system in Punjab.
  • However, the arhatiya system continues to flourish.
  • This is due to the strength of the arhatiya lobby, which allows a section of the 48,000 registered arhatiyas to control around 18.50 lakh farmers.
  • There are also allegations of massive corruption and vested interests and so the farmers are against the arhatiya system.
  • It is alleged that many influential officials and politicians use arhatiyas to employ their ill-gotten wealth in high-interest loans to distressed farmers.

Why the Arhatiya system continues to flourish?

  • Arhatiyas remain powerful figures in the rural landscape.
  • Each agent has between 20 to 200 farmers, whose crops he sells.
  • The government is dependent on arhatiyas, who provide fans, weighing machines, labour to shortstaffed government agencies.
  • Arhatiyas are also moneylenders who fund farmers’ for both cropping operations and personal and social requirements.
  • For many farmers, borrowing from the arhatiya, whom they know personally, is easier and more convenient.
  • Farmers think that a bank has unfamiliar procedures, impersonal service, and unfamiliar officials for borrowing.
  • Farmers also claim that if the arhatiya system is finished, private financiers will step in, and take away our land entirely.

 

Source:  The Indian Express

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