Why in news?
- The Economic Survey 2022-23 said that the agriculture sector needs re-orientation given challenges like adverse impacts of climate change, fragmented landholdings and rising input costs.
What’s in today’s article?
News Summary: Key highlights of the Survey with respect to Agriculture Sector
- Agriculture sector is growing at a robust annual growth rate
- The Survey noted that the Indian agriculture sector has been growing at an average annual growth rate of 4.6 per cent during the last six years.
- It grew by 3.0 per cent in 2021-22 compared to 3.3 per cent in 2020-21.
- India emerged as the net exporter of agricultural products
- In recent years, India has rapidly emerged as the net exporter of agricultural products.
- In 2020-21, exports of agriculture and allied products from India grew by 18 per cent over the previous year.
- During 2021-22, agricultural exports reached an all-time high of $50.2 billion.
- Strong agri growth led to a YoY dip in monthly demand for MGNREGS
- There has been an Year-on-Year (YoY) decline in monthly demand for Mahatma Gandhi National Rural Employment Guarantee Scheme (MGNREGS) work.
- The number of persons demanding work under MGNREGS was seen to be trending around pre-pandemic levels from July to November 2022.
- In FY23, as on 24 January 2023, 6.49 crore households demanded employment under MGNREGS, and 6.48 crore households were offered employment out of which 7 crore availed employment.
- This is resulting from normalisation of the rural economy due to strong agricultural growth and a swift bounce-back from Covid-19.
- The significant growth in rural India, led by agriculture sector, was the major shock absorber during the COVID-19 pandemic.
- When majority of the workforce reverse-migrated to rural areas, agriculture as well as MGNREGA supported the domestic economy.
- The survey also credited the MGNREGS with having a positive impact on income per household, agricultural productivity, and production-related expenditure.
- It added that this helped with income diversification and infusing resilience into rural livelihoods.
- Indian agriculture needs re-orientation
- The Survey highlighted that Indian agriculture needs re-orientation in the backdrop of certain challenges like adverse impacts of climate change, fragmented landholdings, sub-optimal farm mechanisation, low productivity, disguised unemployment, rising input costs, etc.
- The performance of the agriculture sector remains critical to growth and employment in the country.
Other highlights of Economic Survey 2023
- India’s green goals- ambitious and needs money
- The Economic Survey emphasised India’s commitments for climate actions.
- However, it noted that availability of adequate and affordable finance remains a constraint for the country.
- India’s current priority is to grow economically and integrate development goals with climate action targets.
- India has so far largely met its requirements from domestic sources only.
- The survey said the country ranks third globally (after China and Australia) with respect to the net gain in average annual forest area between 2010 and 2020.
- It mentioned that the likely installed capacity by end of 2029-30 is expected to be more than 800GW.
- Of this, non-fossil fuel would contribute more than 500GW, resulting in the decline of average emission rate of around 29% by 2029-30, compared to 2014-15.
- The survey highlighted that India is progressively becoming a favoured destination for investment in renewables.
- During the period 2014-2021, total investment in renewables stood at $78. 1 billion in India.
- Digital infrastructure can add 60-100 bps to GDP growth
- India’s digital public infrastructure (DPI) can add around 60-100 basis points (bps) to the country’s potential GDP growth rate.
- DPI includes platforms like Aadhaar, the Unified Payments Interface (UPI), and the account aggregator network.
- According to the Survey, payments made through UPI accounted for over half of all digital transactions in India in FY22 (2021-22).
- In FY22, UPI accounted for 52 per cent of the total 8,840 crore financial digital transactions with a total value of Rs 126 lakh crore.
- The Survey said that the country had a fintech adoption rate of 87 per cent among the public, compared to the global average of 64 per cent, making India the third biggest market for such transactions after the US and China.