PM AASHA, a crop price support scheme, saw real spending only in the months around 2019 and 2024 Lok Sabha elections.
Shreegireesh Jalihal & Navya Asopa
NEW DELHI, May 8 (The CONNECT) – Narendra Modi became Prime Minister in 2014 after making a series of promises to people. One among them was farmers would get more than half the cost of production as profit. It sounded good.
Then came something better: In 2016, he promised to double farmers’ income in six years. Soon, “doubling farmers income” became the government’s common refrain.
To do that, his government launched a slew of schemes, and repackaged some existing ones.
One of these was PM AASHA or Pradhan Mantri Annadata Aay Sanrakshan Abhiyaan, a scheme meant to protect the income of millions of farmers who grow pulses and oilseeds across the country.
For details click here.
Originally published by The Reporters’ Collective.
Then came something better: In 2016, he promised to double farmers’ income in six years. Soon, “doubling farmers income” became the government’s common refrain.
To do that, his government launched a slew of schemes, and repackaged some existing ones.
One of these was PM AASHA or Pradhan Mantri Annadata Aay Sanrakshan Abhiyaan, a scheme meant to protect the income of millions of farmers who grow pulses and oilseeds across the country.
For details click here.
Originally published by The Reporters’ Collective.