There’s both good news and bad news on the food front. The good news is that wheat, maize and pulses production during the current year will be the highest that India has seen. Wheat production was expected to be high, thanks to the twin advantages of a high procurement price —- higher than international prices —- and favourable weather conditions. But pulses production too has zoomed, because of the soaring prices in the...
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5 of farmer’s family attempt suicide to reclaim land
Five members of a farmer’s family attempted suicide at a land dealer’s residence in Dodar village of Sanand taluka of Ahmedabad district by consuming pesticide, on Monday. The family has alleged that the land dealer, Vikram Fulabhai Solanki, an advocate, had duped them of their farmland spread over 15 bighas worth over Rs 5 crore, which he had refused to return. The five have been identified as Mansinh Ramu Sandhav (70), Kalusinh...
More »Govt likely to bring millet, fodder under food security mission by Sanjeeb Mukherjee
Buoyed by its success in increasing pulses production in India through effective implementation of National Food Security Mission (NFSM), the government is likely to bring production of millet and fodder under the mission’s ambit in the forthcoming Budget. The programme which will be on the lines of accelerated pulses production programme (A3P) is expected to be operationalised in the next one year. Officials said this programme, which would be part of NFSM...
More »Wheat Hoarding Likely to Be `Widespread,' Prompting Price Gains, UN Says by Luzi Ann Javier
Global wheat harvests may trail demand for a second year, spurring hoarding and further price gains, said the United Nations. “Whenever you get the market as tight as we are now, hoarding becomes widespread,” Abdolreza Abbassian, a senior economist at the UN Food and Agriculture Organization, said in an interview by phone from Rome. Wheat, corn and soybeans soared to the highest levels since 2008 yesterday as a U.S. government report showed...
More »Poor NREGS show
The state needs to pull up its socks as far as implementation of the Centre’s ambitious rural job scheme is concerned. That’s what the report card of Jharkhand National Rural Employment Guarantee Act Watch — a joint forum of NGOs that keeps a tab on rural employment — says. At a daylong meeting today, members of the watchdog observed that the state needed concerted efforts and political will to effectively implement works...
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