UP Maize Farmers Hit Hard as State Procurement Deadline Passes, Forcing Distress Sales
Uttar Pradesh maize farmers face a financial crisis as state procurement centers close their doors on December 31. Left with unsold stock in Bulandshahr, growers are forced into distress sales at 30% below the MSP of ₹2,400 per quintal. Read about the administrative hurdles and the economic impact on the region's agricultural community as farmers seek urgent government intervention.
The situation reached a boiling point at local procurement centers where piles of harvested maize remained stagnant for days. Farmers reported that despite their crops being physically present at the centers well before the deadline, the clock ran out on the administrative process, leaving their produce unverified and unsold. With the state gates now locked, the transition from a regulated market to the open mandi has been devastating. While the Union Government fixed the Minimum Support Price (MSP) at ₹2,400 per quintal to ensure a fair return on investment, the sudden lack of state competition has seen market rates plummet. Desperate to clear their stock and settle mounting debts, local farmers are currently offloading their produce to commission agents for as little as ₹1,600 to ₹1,800 per quintal—a loss of nearly 30% per unit.
The financial fallout extends beyond individual ledgers, threatening the broader rural economy of the region. Many affected growers have voiced their grievances to the district administration and the Agriculture Department, citing systemic delays in the procurement process that prevented them from selling within the stipulated timeframe. They argue that the rigid adherence to the December 31 cutoff ignores the ground realities of harvesting and transport logistics. As the administrative silence persists, the disparity between the promised MSP and the actual market realization highlights a growing gap in the agricultural support system. This incident underscores a recurring challenge in India’s agrarian sector: the struggle to ensure that policy-driven price protections effectively reach the hands of the farmers before market volatility takes its toll.

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