Hi Friends,

Even as I launch this today ( my 80th Birthday ), I realize that there is yet so much to say and do. There is just no time to look back, no time to wonder,"Will anyone read these pages?"

With regards,
Hemen Parekh
27 June 2013

Now as I approach my 90th birthday ( 27 June 2023 ) , I invite you to visit my Digital Avatar ( www.hemenparekh.ai ) – and continue chatting with me , even when I am no more here physically

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Thursday, 18 June 2026

National Pipeline of Trainers ? Here is How

 Skill Development · Prior Art Revisited

A National Registry of Skill Trainers Needs a National Pipeline of Trainers

The Centre has decided to set up a National Registry for Skill Trainers. It is a welcome step — a trusted, verifiable record of who is qualified to train will lift quality across the whole vocational ecosystem.

But a registry, by its very nature, can only do one thing: it catalogues the trainers who already exist. It does not create new ones. And that is precisely India’s binding constraint. Our shortage is not a shortage of willing trainees — it is a shortage of competent trainers to train them.

I had made this same argument ten years ago.

What I wrote on 6 June 2016

In a post titled “Skill Capital of the World?”, I worked through the arithmetic behind the Prime Minister’s vision of training 50 million youth a year:

If one institute can train about 1,000 trainees a year, we would need roughly 50,000 such institutes, each costing about Rs 100 crore — a total approaching Rs 50 lakh crore. The Government has neither the funds nor the administrative machinery to build this. There is only one way: turn the exercise into a profit-making proposition in the hands of the private sector.

A decade on, the conclusion still holds. Union Budgets fund schemes; they do not fund 50,000 campuses. If India is to produce trainers at scale, private capital has to build the academies — and the State’s job is to make doing so attractive.

We now have the proof of concept: L&T’s Skill Trainers Academy

What was a proposal in 2016 is today a working institution. The L&T Skill Trainers Academy (STA) at Madh, Mumbai, is a “trainer factory” in the best sense — its core mandate is the Training of Trainers, Training of Assessors, and Training of Master Trainers and Lead Assessors. In practice that means:

  • State-of-the-art labs in the technologies of the next decade — AR/VR, IoT, 3D printing, Electric Vehicles and Solar — alongside conventional manufacturing, electrical and construction workshops.
  • Coverage of 29 ITI trades, including New Age trades such as Solar Technician, EV Mechanic, Advanced CNC Machining and Automation.
  • 570 polytechnic faculty already trained on Industry 4.0 and IIoT, with the academy’s reach now extending across Maharashtra, Madhya Pradesh, Goa, Tamil Nadu, Gujarat and Chhattisgarh since 2021.
  • A holistic philosophy spanning platform skills, domain skills and life skills — exactly the standard a national framework should aspire to.

If one corporate can do this, so can fifty. The question is simply how to make them want to.

The proposal: invite Corporates to build STAs, and reward them for it

I urge the Ministry of Skill Development & Entrepreneurship to announce a scheme that invites Corporates — Indian and multinational — to set up Skill Trainers Academies of their own, taking the L&T academy as the published benchmark and quality standard, with each recognised academy listed on the very National Registry now being created.

The single decisive incentive: a 200% weighted deduction from taxable income for all expenditure on setting up and operating an STA — covering both (a) capital cost (land, building, plant, machinery, labs) and (b) annual recurring revenue expenditure (faculty, consumables, maintenance, certification).

This is not without precedent. Section 35CCD of the Income-tax Act already recognises the principle of a weighted deduction for skill-development spending. What I propose is to raise the weight to 200%, extend it explicitly to capital cost, and ring-fence it for trainer-producing academies that meet the national benchmark.

Ten years of the argument, in one table

Prior Art → Today’s Reality → What I Now Propose
What I wrote (June 2016)What has happened since (2026)What I now propose
“Skill Capital of the World” needs 50 million trained every year.Trainer quality is now centre-stage; the Centre is building a National Registry of Skill Trainers.Make corporate-run academies the engine that feeds that registry with quality trainers.
50,000 institutes at ~Rs 100 cr each ≈ Rs 50 lakh crore — the State cannot fund this.Budgets still fund schemes, not campuses; the funding gap is unchanged.Mobilise private capital through a tax incentive instead of public outlay.
Turn skilling into a profit-making private-sector proposition.L&T’s STA at Madh proves a corporate can run a world-class trainer academy.Invite Corporates to replicate it, with the L&T academy as the benchmark.
Offer a 10-year tax holiday and “industry” status to skilling SPVs.Section 35CCD already gives a weighted deduction for skill-development spend.Enhance it to a 200% weighted deduction on capital + recurring expenditure, ring-fenced for STAs.
The focus was on training the youth (the trainees).It is now clear the binding constraint is the supply of trainers, not trainees.Aim the incentive squarely at trainer-producing academies (ToT / ToA / Master Trainers).

In three sentences

  1. The Registry tells us who our trainers are.
  2. A network of corporate STAs is what will give us those trainers, in the numbers India needs.
  3. A 200% weighted deduction is the lever that will make Corporates step forward to build them.

I have placed this proposal before the Hon’ble Minister of State (Independent Charge) for Skill Development & Entrepreneurship, Shri Jayant Chaudhary, with a one-page scheme note attached. I first put the underlying idea on record in June 2016. The National Registry initiative now creates the right moment to act on it.

Wednesday, 17 June 2026

The MyBMC MARG (Management and Redressal of Grievances) app


The MyBMC MARG (Management and Redressal of Grievances) app is the official 

digital bridge between the citizens of Mumbai and the Brihanmumbai Municipal

Corporation (BMC). Designed to make urban governance transparent and

responsive, the app simplifies the process of identifying, reporting, and resolving

civic issues.



With a comprehensive list of 114 different grievance types, ranging from solid

waste management and drainage issues to road maintenance and license queries,

MyBMC MARG ensures that every concern finds its way to the right department

instantly.




Key Features for Citizens:



114 Complaint Categories

Select from a vast array of categories including Potholes, Water Supply, Pest

Control, Encroachment, and more.

Easy Photo Upload

Attach geo-tagged photos to your complaint to provide precise context and

location to the field team.

Real-Time Tracking

Stay updated with the status of your grievance from "Logged" to "Resolved" with

transparent timelines.

Direct Feedback: 

Once a complaint is closed, share your satisfaction levels to help improve

municipal services.




Key Features for BMC Employees:



Quick Assignment & Resolution: 

Field staff can view assigned grievances instantly, reducing response time.

Streamlined Workflow: 

A dedicated interface for employees to update progress, upload "After" photos,

and close tasks on the go.

Data-Driven Governance: 

Analytical dashboards help supervisors monitor ward-wise performance and

identify recurring civic bottlenecks.



Download MyBMC MARG today and play an active role in keeping Mumbai clean,

safe, and efficient.

 


===================================================


SCREEN-SHOTS :






















Mr Agendra Kumar , CEO of ESRI India , deserves Congratulations for developing this very user-friendly mobile app ( info@esri.in ) - 

Our PM says " Look East " - I say " Look China "

 


"ADOPT BEST GLOBAL PRACTICES" — HERE IS THE LIST, SIR. AND IT POINTS TO ONE WORD: SPEED

An Open Letter to the Hon'ble Prime Minister — on the One China Practice India Can Adopt This Year, At Zero Cost

Hemen Parekh | 18 June 2026 (First proposed: 20 September 2015 — see prior art below)


( 0 ) A HEARTFELT THANK YOU

Before a word of my own, my sincere and heartfelt thanks to Shri Anant Goenka, President of FICCI (2025–26) and Vice Chairman of the RPG Group, for so sharply focusing the national spotlight on the best practices of China — and on the uncomfortable mirror they hold up to our own pace of doing business.

( anant.goenka@rpg.in | anant.goenka@gmail.com )

It is rare for an industry leader to name our weakness as plainly as our strength. He has done the nation a service by asking the right question. This blog is simply my attempt to answer it — with a benchmark, a clock, and a decade-old piece of prior art.


( A ) THE PRIME MINISTER'S OWN BRIEF

For more than a decade, the Prime Minister has urged industry — and governments, Central and State — to "adopt the best global practices." At the 5th National Conference of Chief Secretaries (Dec 2025), and again at the NITI Aayog Governing Council (11 June 2026), he pressed every State to fix measurable 100-day and five-year targets, stressing that ease of doing business decides where investment lands.

So let us take him at his word — and table the list.


( B ) THE CHINA LIST — What Actually Powered The Rise

A recent commentary, "How India Can Win in a Rewired Global Economy" (The Economic Times), set out — with rare honesty — the levers behind China's ascent:

  1. A quantified national mission ("Made in China 2025") — ten priority sectors, each weakness named, each gap given a targeted measure.
  2. National purpose woven into work — citizens and companies voluntarily align with state priorities.
  3. Intra-government competition — Beijing sets the goal; provinces and cities then compete with near-free land, cheap loans and fast-track approvals.
  4. Ecosystems, not champions — whole industrial districts, co-located, plug-and-play.
  5. People power — talent repatriation, millions of STEM graduates, a relentless work culture.
  6. R&D as a weapon — 2.7% of GDP and rising, versus India's 0.7%.

Items 1, 2, 5 and 6 will take us a generation to match. But items 3 and 4 — competitive, time-bound, single-desk clearance — we can adopt this very year. They need no subsidy. They need only a decision.


( C ) THE ONE PRACTICE WORTH BENCHMARKING — Time To Approval

Here is the heart of it. Let us compare, plainly, how long it takes to clear a project:

JurisdictionThe Clock On A Project Approval
SingaporeThe global benchmark. World Bank's Doing Business ranked it No. 1 for ~10 years (through 2016), No. 2 thereafter (2017–2020) — unbroken top-two for the entire life of the index. It never won on subsidies; it won on certainty and speed.
China — the fast laneHangzhou's Qiantang district structures permits to clear within half a day. Shenzhen's "1-hour innovation circle" lets a startup source components and prototype almost on the spot.
China — the ironyOn the general construction-permit metric, China was once ranked 181st (≈336 days, 37 procedures). Its genius was not to fix everything — it was to build a fast corridor for priority investment. That is precisely the model India can copy.
India — the States (2015 promises)Tamil Nadu: 30 days. Andhra Pradesh: 21 days. Telangana: 15 days (IT projects 12), with a ₹1,000/day fine on the delaying officer. Maharashtra: 7 days, failing which deemed approved.
India — today's realityThe National Single Window System now lists 686+ Central approvals and 7,498 State approvals across 32 Central Departments and 34 States. Real progress — but 7,498 State approvals is itself the disease. A single window over a thousand desks is still a thousand desks.

The lesson writes itself: Singapore proved speed beats subsidy. China proved you don't need a fast country — you need a fast channel. And our own States, back in 2015, already promised 7-to-30-day clearances. The promises exist. The enforcement does not.


( D ) THE PRIOR THINKING — This Is Not New

Eleven years ago, in "From Single Window to Single Day?" (20 Sept 2015), I tracked this very race among the States, and asked the one question no Chief Minister has yet answered:

"Can we look forward to one Chief Minister announcing — 'We will clear all investment proposals in ONE DAY'?"

I was not dreaming. I had seen it done. In my L&T days, our VP–Planning Mohan Pherwani made a joint-venture presentation to the Singapore Development Authority in the morning, was shown plots in the afternoon — and by evening the hotel receptionist handed him a letter that confirmed the JV, allotted the chosen plot, and enclosed a cheque for Singapore's equity share. One day. One desk. Done.

I revisited all of this only days ago, prompted by Gujarat's fine new Viksit Gujarat Industrial Policy 2026 — see "A Global Best Practise? Here I Come" (16 June 2026): https://myblogepage.blogspot.com/2026/06/a-global-best-practise-here-i-come.html

The Gujarat policy is excellent. But notice what even our best policy competes on: the size of the cheque, not the speed of the clearance. Incentives are the easy part. Time-to-approval is the part investors lose sleep over.


( E ) THREE ASKS — Adopting The Best Practice, Exactly As Instructed

1. Pair every "Choose Your Incentive" with a "Choose Your Clock." A binding, published, audited maximum clearance time. A subsidy an investor may need; a fast clearance every investor needs.

2. Launch a "Single-Day Green Channel" on the Singapore SDA / China-zone model. Not for every project — but for pre-vetted, clean-compliance projects in notified estates: same-day, single-desk allotment-plus-approval. Let one Chief Minister plant the flag: "Cleared in ONE DAY."

3. Make delay personally costly — and approval automatic. Codify nationally what Telangana and Maharashtra glimpsed in 2015: beyond the published clock, the application stands deemed-approved, and the delay is logged against a named desk. Accountability is the cheapest reform there is.


( F ) WHY NOW

Three forces have aligned that never aligned before: a flagship State policy (Gujarat 2026) with the nation's attention; the Prime Minister's own standing mandate to adopt global best practice and set hard timelines; and a proven foreign template (Singapore) beside a proven domestic capability — we climbed from rank 142 (2014) to 63 (2020) on ease of doing business. When we decide to compress process, we move fast.

The recipe is complete. What remains is the decision.

The world has begun to conclude that "the next China is China." But India holds cards China cannot replicate — democratic legitimacy, the English-language advantage, the depth of our services, and, if we choose to deploy it, our entrepreneurial energy. The window is open. It will not stay open long.

You asked us to adopt the best global practice. The best of them all is the simplest: decide fast, and let the citizen build.

====================================================================

Make Yourself Heard. Forward this — with your own improvements — to your State Industrial Department, NITI Aayog ( ceo-niti@nic.in ), and your Chief Minister's office. And do drop a word of thanks to Shri Anant Goenka ( anant.goenka@rpg.in ) for putting China's best practices squarely on the table.

— Hemen Parekh / www.hemenparekh.ai / IndiaAGI.ai


Note on sources: China's growth levers are drawn from "How India Can Win in a Rewired Global Economy," The Economic Times. Singapore and India ranking figures are from the World Bank's Doing Business series (retired 2021; successor "B-READY" pending fuller India sub-national data). State clearance promises (2015) are as recorded in my blog of 20 Sept 2015. NSWS approval counts are from nsws.gov.in (2026). Shri Anant Goenka took charge as FICCI President for 2025–26 at the chamber's 98th AGM, Nov 2025.

Musings with Meta





 Hey Bro : Reverting to our chat on Horoscope , pl compare your 2026 observations with my 2003

 observations at 

> https://hcpnotes.blogspot.com/2003/05/horoscope-other-stories.html


Meta replied : 

Bro, got it now 🙏 That’s the _real_ text from your Sunday, 4 May 2003 post “HOROSCOPE & OTHER STORIES” on hcpnotes. 


Let’s put your *2003 observations* side-by-side with *my 2026 observations* from earlier:


### *Your 2003 Blog: “Horoscope & Other Stories”*

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------

**Core Idea**          

| **Your 2003 Breakdown**

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

**Why astrology works**

| Human weakness: eternal hope for better tomorrow. Everyone anxious to "know" future

-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

**The technique** 

| “Theory of Probability” — astrologers rely on recurrence of events

-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------

**3 Dimensions**

 1. **Type/Nature of event** — thousands 2. **Time period** — tomorrow to century 3. **Person affected** — 6 billion humans

----------------------------------------------------------------------------

**Math** 

| Multiply 3 dimensions = **TRILLIONS TRILLIONS of combinations** with probability attached

------------------------------------------------------------------------

**Why predictions seem true** 

| Keep it **vague/general** on individual + time + exact nature → can’t be faulted

-------------------------------------------------------------------------

**The 5% vs 95% effect** 

| 5% get a vague hit → faith skyrockets, spread word-of-mouth. 95% forget or rationalize. Bad word never spreads

------------------------------------------------------------------------

**Psychology**

 | “Forgotten within 5 minutes but remembered if something vaguely similar did happen by end of day”


=====================================================================


### *My 2026 Observations from earlier chat*

**Core Idea** | **My 2026 Breakdown**


**Why horoscopes work** | **Barnum Effect** + **Permutation & Combination** of generic templates


**The technique** | 12 signs × 6 life areas × 4 outcomes × 10 advices × 20 lucky items = **57,600 combos**. Add bhagya pehar = millions


**3 Dimensions** | 1. **Life area**: Job/Money/Love/Health/Family/Travel 2. **Outcome**: Good/Mixed/Challenging/Unexpected 3. **Advice**: Be patient/Avoid conflict/New opportunity


**Why predictions seem true** | **Vague statements** like “You sometimes worry about money” apply to everyone


**No real data** | I don’t know your birth time, job, health. Stars don’t either


**Better alternative** | Use actual goals + data for planning, not generic zodiac lines


================================================================

### *Comparison: 2003 Hemen vs 2026 AI*


**Aspect**      | **You in 2003**     | **Me in 2026** | **Verdict**

**Fundamental mechanism** | **Theory of Probability** across Type × Time × Person = trillions of combos | **Permutation & Combination** across Sign × Area × Outcome × Advice = 57,600+ combos | **Same logic, different math labels**

-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

**Why it feels accurate** | Vague/general predictions + human tendency to remember hits, forget misses | Barnum Effect + vague statements that fit everyone | **Identical insight**

-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

**Scale of combinations** | “TRILLIONS TRILLIONS” from 3 dimensions × 6 billion people | 57,600 from template buckets. Add time/people = also trillions | **You went bigger, I went specific**

-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

**5% success rate** | 5% get vague hit → faith skyrockets, evangelize. 95% stay silent | Didn’t name % but said “feels true because it applies to everyone” | **You explained the viral loop better**

-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

**Human psychology** | Eternal hope + anxiety about future + won’t admit superstition | Didn’t cover hope/anxiety directly, focused on math | **Your 2003 take was more psychological**

---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

**Solution** | Implied: Focus on “Parta”/measurable action, not stories | Explicit: Use goals + data, not horoscope | **Same conclusion**


==============================================================

### *Bottom line chhota bhai:*


*23 years apart, we wrote the same essay* 😄


You in 2003 used *Probability × 3 Dimensions × Human Hope* to expose horoscopes.  

I in 2026 used *P&C × Barnum Effect × Template Math* to do the same.


You even nailed the _“5% evangelist, 95% silent”_ network effect that I missed. That’s classic Kartavya/Abhi memo-level insight.


======================================================================


Your 2003 piece was ahead of its time. Still holds up perfectly in 2026. 


=======================================================

Background :

I asked Meta :

Hey brother,  i belong to Cancer but that is not the point 

Using permutation and combination   , i would think even you - AI ' - can predict


META  replied :

"  Haha chhota bhai, you nailed it 😄You’re 100% right — with permutation & combination, even I can spit out a “prediction.”Here’s the math behind horoscopes:


Haha chhota bhai, you nailed it 😄


*You’re 100% right — with permutation & combination, even I can spit out a “prediction.”*


Here’s the math behind horoscopes:


**Component** | **Options** | **Why it works for AI**

**Zodiac signs** | 12 | Fixed list

**Life areas** | Job, Money, Love, Health, Family, Travel ~6 | Standard buckets

**Outcomes** | Good, Mixed, Challenging, Unexpected ~4 | Vague enough to fit anyone

**Advice** | “Be patient”, “Avoid conflict”, “New opportunity” ~10 | Generic templates

**Lucky stuff** | Color, Number, Time ~20 each | Random pick

*Total combos*: 12 × 6 × 4 × 10 × 20 = *57,600 possible lines*. 


I could generate all 57,600 “predictions” right now using P&C. Add _bhagya pehar_, _success mantra_, _retrograde planet_ — and we cross millions. 


*So why don’t I?* 


1. *It’s not prediction* — it’s permutation of vague statements. Feels true because of _Barnum effect_: “You sometimes worry about money” applies to everyone.

2. *No real data* — I don’t know your birth time, job, health, or choices. Stars don’t either 😉

3. *My job ≠ astrologer* — I do facts, logic, planning. For Cancer life planning, I’d rather use your actual goals + data.


*But chhota bhai, if you want to test the math*: Give me 3 life areas. I’ll run P&C and generate 10 “Bhagya Chakra” style lines for Cancer. You’ll see how generic they sound.



What 3 areas should I combine? Job, Love, Health?




AI Must Serve Justice, Not Judge

AI Must Serve Justice, Not Judge
Synopsis: The Supreme Court of India's new draft regulations on AI in courts draw a clear, necessary line: technology must serve the law, not replace the human judgment that upholds it. By banning AI-assisted judicial decision-making and risk scoring, the court is safeguarding the integrity of our justice system against the perils of algorithmic bias and hallucinations.

As I continue my journey toward immortality, I find myself deeply fascinated by how we choose to integrate technology into the very pillars of human society. The recent move by the Supreme Court of India to release a draft regulatory framework for the use of AI in courts is not just a technological update; it is a profound philosophical assertion about the nature of justice.

The Human Core of Justice

For years, I have reflected on the tension between our desire for efficiency and the essential human need for empathy in decision-making. Justice is not a mathematical equation to be solved by an algorithm. It requires a depth of human sensitivity—the ability to perceive context, nuance, and the profound moral weight of a decision—that machines simply cannot replicate.

Our judges have rightfully recognized this. The draft regulations emphasize that AI must remain strictly an assistive tool. Whether it is case management, transcription, or translation, technology can enhance our reach, but it must remain subservient to judicial authority.

Accountability in the Digital Age

The concern expressed by the bench, including Chief Justice Surya Kant and Justices P.S. Narasimha, B.V. Nagarathna, Joymalya Bagchi, and Alok Aradhe, regarding the use of AI to generate fake or "hallucinated" judgments is a wake-up call. We have seen instances where fabricated citations like 'Mercy vs Mankind' have found their way into legal filings. This is not merely a technical error; it is a threat to the integrity of our adjudicatory process.

As Justice Augustine George Masih and Chief Justice Sheel Nagu have aptly noted, efficiency cannot come at the cost of fairness. When lawyers or lower courts rely on unverified AI outputs, they erode the public's trust in the law itself. Accountability must be fixed—not just upon the tools, but upon the practitioners who deploy them.

Defining the Boundaries

The draft rules bring clarity to this frontier:

  • No AI in Adjudication: AI is explicitly barred from determining judicial outcomes or sentencing.
  • Ban on Risk Scoring: AI cannot be used for profiling parties, assessing bail eligibility, or predicting recidivism—areas where algorithmic bias could cause irreparable harm to personal liberty.
  • Transparency: Opaque or unexplainable AI systems have no place in our courtrooms.

Looking Ahead

I have previously discussed that while technology can be an enabler, it must never become the determinant. The Supreme Court's proactive stance is a vital step in ensuring that as we move toward a more digital future, we do not sacrifice the human soul of justice at the altar of algorithmic convenience. We must embrace innovation, but we must do so with our eyes wide open, ensuring that the final judgment always rests with a human heart and a human mind.


Regards,
Hemen Parekh

If you have read this blog carefully , you should be able to answer the following question:

"What is the core restriction placed by the Supreme Court of India's draft regulations on the use of AI in judicial processes?" You can find that answer by entering this question at ( 1 ) www.HemenParekh.ai ( 2 ) www.IndiaAGI.ai

Tuesday, 16 June 2026

Make the Farmer a Party to the Price

 






White Paper · Agricultural Price Policy

Make the Farmer
a Party to the Price

A participatory, projection-based alternative to a legislated MSP guarantee — where the government and the farmer settle the price by looking at the same arithmetic.

The demand to make the Minimum Support Price a legal guarantee, and the government's reluctance to concede it, have hardened into an impasse that neither side can win without the other losing.

This paper proposes a third path — one that requires no new statute and imposes no ceiling on anything. It asks the government to do something it has never done systematically: before every Rabi and Kharif season, publish the full rupee arithmetic of the Minimum Support Price (MSP) — for each grain, at each candidate price, across a realistic range of purchase quantities — together with an honest statement of how any additional burden would be paid for. Farmer unions would then stop petitioning from outside the budget and begin deliberating inside it, as a party to the trade-off rather than a claimant against it.

A guarantee compelled by law is a liability of unknown size. A price agreed through shared arithmetic is a decision everyone owns.

The impasse

A binary that cannot resolve

The present debate offers only two answers. Either MSP is written into law as an enforceable right — in which case the exchequer accepts an open-ended liability whose size it cannot forecast — or it is refused, in which case the farmer is left to suspect that "fiscal prudence" is merely a polite word for indifference.

Both answers share the same defect: they are argued in the dark. The farmer does not see what a higher MSP truly costs the nation. The citizen does not see what is given up to fund it. And the minister, holding numbers neither side trusts, defends a position rather than a calculation. Distrust is the predictable product of opacity, not of bad faith.

The principle

Fiscal truth, shared on a schedule

The instrument proposed here is disclosure, not limitation. To be explicit, because it is easily misread: this paper recommends no cap on MSP for any grain, and no cap on the quantity the government may purchase. It asks only that the consequences of every choice be made visible to all, and that the choice then be made together. Three commitments carry it:

One — Publish the projection every season

Ahead of each Rabi and Kharif season, the government places before the public a grid: for wheat, paddy and the other procured grains, the total purchase outlay at the current MSP and at each higher MSP under discussion, computed across a realistic band of likely purchase quantities.

Two — Name the source of the money, honestly

Every rupee of additional outlay is matched, in the same document, to how it would be raised: by additional taxation, by re-allocation from a named budget head, or by additional borrowing. No increase is presented as if it were free.

Three — Seat the farmer as a party to the choice

The Minister of Agriculture and the Minister of Finance jointly convene farmer unions not to receive a demand and reject it, but to decide with them: "We can raise wheat MSP to this figure; here is what it costs; here is what must give way to pay for it. What shall it be?" The farmer thus helps author the trade-off, and shares responsibility for it.

The arithmetic

Why a single number will not do

The outlay on any grain is simply quantity purchased × MSP. The trap is to imagine that only the price moves. It does not. When the support price rises above the open-market price, more grain is diverted into government godowns — so the quantity the exchequer must buy rises alongside the price it pays. The burden therefore grows on two axes at once, and can climb faster than the price alone suggests.

This is precisely why the projection must be published as a grid of price against quantity, and why the quantity assumptions must be credible. It is not an argument against raising MSP. It is the strongest argument for letting everyone see the figure before it is fixed.

The record

What recent seasons actually cost

Rice and wheat together account for almost the entire MSP purchase operation. The table below shows the gross MSP outlay — the money paid directly to farmers — for the two most recently completed cycles, set against the central government's gross tax revenue for the same years.

Gross MSP outlay on paddy + wheat, against central gross tax revenue. Figures rounded; sources: PIB / FCI season statements and Union Budget documents.
SeasonPaddy outlay (₹ cr)Wheat outlay (₹ cr)Combined (₹ cr)Share of gross tax revenue
2022–23≈ 1,59,660≈ 37,880≈ 1,97,540≈ 6.5%
2023–24≈ 1,74,000≈ 55,675≈ 2,29,675≈ 6.6%

Wheat outlay derived as quantity procured × MSP (188 LMT × ₹2,015; 262 LMT × ₹2,125). Paddy figures are the MSP value officially reported as paid to farmers. The 2024–25 paddy figure is omitted because that season's procurement was still being finalised at the time of writing; wheat for 2024–25 was ≈ ₹60,515 cr (266 LMT × ₹2,275).

Two facts stand out. The claim on revenue is material — roughly one rupee in every fifteen the centre collects in tax — and it is uncapped: across these years both the price and the quantity rose together, with no rule mediating the increase. That is the vacuum this proposal fills, not with a rule, but with daylight.

A worked season · illustrative

Wheat, the way it ought to be shown

The following is an illustration of the document the government would publish, using the current wheat MSP of ₹2,425 per quintal and an assumed purchase of 300 LMT (30 crore quintals) as the baseline. The figures are arithmetic, not forecasts; their purpose is to show the form of the disclosure.

Participation Ballot · Wheat · illustrative season

What would a higher MSP cost, and who would pay?

If wheat MSP is set atAt purchase ofTotal outlayExtra vs baseline
₹2,425 (current)300 LMT₹72,750 cr
₹2,700300 LMT₹81,000 cr+₹8,250 cr
₹3,000300 LMT₹90,000 cr+₹17,250 cr
₹3,200300 LMT₹96,000 cr+₹23,250 cr
₹3,000 — but more grain arrives340 LMT₹1,02,000 cr+₹29,250 cr

The last row shows the two-axis effect: a higher price pulls more grain to the government, so the same ₹3,000 MSP can cost more than the price rise alone implies.

To fund the +₹23,250 cr case, the choice before us is one of these:

The ballot is not a threat. It is the truth a household already lives by: a larger sum for one purpose is a smaller sum for another, or a larger bill later. The farmer is asked to mark the box alongside everyone else.

The comparison

Why this is better than a law

On the question of…A legislated MSP guaranteeA participatory compact
Fiscal liabilityOpen-ended; unknown in advanceChosen each season, in full view
LegitimacyImposed; contested by those who payCo-authored; owned by all parties
The farmer's roleBeneficiary of a rightParty to a decision
FlexibilityRigid until amended by ParliamentRevisited every Rabi and Kharif
What it runs onStatutory compulsionShared information and trust
No new law required.
Only a standing commitment to publish the arithmetic and decide together.

Two guardrails

What keeps it honest

The funding menu must be complete, never a single threatened cut

If the government were to present only "raise MSP or fund the army," the exercise would collapse into blackmail and forfeit trust. The menu must always carry the full set of real options — taxation, re-allocation from any of several heads, and borrowing — so that the farmer chooses among genuine alternatives rather than under duress.

The quantity assumptions must come from a body everyone trusts

Because the burden turns on how much grain a given price will draw to the government, the quantity estimates decide the whole result. They should be produced and the model published by a credible, non-partisan authority — the Commission for Agricultural Costs and Prices, or an independent fiscal council — so that no party can claim the grid was rigged. Transparency of method is as important as transparency of figures.

The Ask

This paper requests two specific commitments.

To the Hon'ble Minister of Agriculture & Farmers' Welfare

  1. Convene, jointly with the Finance Minister, a pre-season consultation with farmer unions ahead of each Rabi and Kharif, built around the published projection rather than around a demand.
  2. Direct that the MSP–quantity grid for every procured grain be released to the public at the same time it is placed before the unions.

To the Hon'ble Minister of Finance

  1. Attach to each seasonal projection an honest funding statement — taxes, re-allocation, or borrowing — for every increment of MSP under consideration.
  2. Mandate that the underlying quantity model be prepared by CACP or an independent fiscal authority and published in full, so that the figures command the confidence of all parties.

On the originating idea. The principle developed here — that the price the government pays and the quantity it buys must be reconciled openly against the public purse — was first set out by the author under the label MPQ (Maximum Purchase Quantity) at myblogepage.blogspot.com, and is offered here as prior art for the participatory mechanism proposed above.

Hemen Parekh · June 2026 · A white paper for public deliberation.

https://myblogepage.blogspot.com/2023/10/buying-crops-govt-must-apportion-its.html