A rapid increase in enrollment was to be the hallmark of the PMFBY. The target was to cover 50% of the cropped area, about 9 crore 8 lakh hectares, by 2018-19. In 2017-2018, the second year of the PMFBY, the enrollment numbers fell sharply, taking the coverage to below 2015 levels. Against the target of 50% for 2018-19, the coverage stands at less than 26% in 2017-18. The scheme is supposed to provide insurance protection to farmers against crop losses due to natural events – has turned into a bonanza for insurance companies while farmers are angry over delays in claim settlement, rejections and paltry compensation. Launched in 2016, four full seasons have passed since and the financial transactions show earnings of insurance companies reaching almost Rs.16,000 crore from the first three seasons, kharif 2016, rabi 2016-17 and kharif 2017. Although the rabi 2017-18 season is over yet over two months later, claim settlement is still not complete. In other words, the scheme is essentially transferring farmers’ money and government funds to the insurance companies ’coffers while pretending to provide much needed compensation to farmers whose crops are lost in inclement weather conditions. RTI data received and reviewed by
The Wire has revealed that farmers’ claims worth Rs 2,829 crore remain unpaid for the two seasons that the PMFBY has been implemented. The RTI response of the ministry of agriculture and farmers’ welfare is dated October 10. "A majority of claims for rabi 2017-18 are yet to be estimated/approved by company," the ministry noted in its response. Thus, for the 2017–18 season, a majority of the data pertains to Kharif 2017 and the data reflects only 1% of the claims paid for the rabi 2017–18 season. For the 2016–17 season, claims of Rs 546 crore remain pending. Claims need to be settled within two months of harvest, according to the PMFBY guidelines. Harvest for the 2016–17 season would have ended in May 2017, at the very latest. For the 2017–18 season, claims worth Rs 2,282 crore remain pending. The data essentially pertains to Kharif 2017–18, as pointed out by the ministry. The harvest for which would have ended in December 2017, at the very latest. In 2020, several states exited the scheme, declining to implement it. The State of Gujarat exited the PMFBY scheme in August 2020, citing drains on the state's finances because of the high premiums charged under the scheme. The State of Punjab had declined to implement the scheme at all, and the states of Andhra Pradesh, Telangana and Jharkhand subsequently exited the scheme after initially signing up for it. Delay in settlement of claims defeats the very purpose of the flagship Pradhan Mantri Fasal Bima Yojana said the Parliamentary Standing Committee On Agriculture in the report tabled in Lok Sabha on August 10, 2021
Other agriculture schemes launched by central government Agriculture initiatives schemes launched by the central government are: •
2020 Indian agriculture acts •
PM Kisan Tractor Yojana •
E-NAM for online agrimarketing •
Gramin Bhandaran Yojana for local storage • Irrigation in India#Micro • National Action Plan for Climate Change#NMSA •
National Scheme on Fisheries Training and Extension •
National Scheme on Welfare of Fishermen •
Pradhan Mantri Kisan Samman Nidhi for minimum support scheme •
Pradhan Mantri Krishi Sinchai Yojana for irrigation • Agriculture in India#OF for organic farming • Pradhan Mantri Fasal Bima Yojana, for crop insurance ==See also==