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Economics May 25, 2026 4 min read Daily brief · #24 of 35

India's wheat procurement surges past 34 million tonnes, bolsters food buffers

Wheat procurement under the Rabi Marketing Season (RMS) 2026-27 crossed 34 million tonnes, nearing the revised target of 34.497 million tonnes — a record sur...


What Happened

  • Wheat procurement under the Rabi Marketing Season (RMS) 2026-27 crossed 34 million tonnes, nearing the revised target of 34.497 million tonnes — a record surge compared to 30.035 million tonnes procured in RMS 2025-26.
  • The government raised the procurement target mid-season from the initial 30.3 million tonnes to 34.497 million tonnes, responding to improved crop output and rising farmer arrivals.
  • Punjab and Haryana both surpassed their individual targets — Punjab procured 12.3 million tonnes (against a target of 12.2 million tonnes) and Haryana procured 8.089 million tonnes (against 7.5 million tonnes).
  • The surge in central pool stocks is expected to ease food inflation pressures, particularly for wheat and wheat-based products that have seen elevated retail prices over the past two years.
  • Wheat was procured at the MSP of ₹2,585 per quintal for the 2026-27 season, with relaxed quality norms applied in Punjab to accommodate crop damage from unseasonal rains.

Static Topic Bridges

Food Corporation of India (FCI) and Central Procurement Mechanism

FCI, established under the Food Corporations Act, 1964, is the nodal agency responsible for procurement, storage, and distribution of foodgrains under the National Food Security Act (NFSA), 2013. It operates the central pool, which is a consolidated reserve of procured grains used for distribution under the Public Distribution System (PDS) and other welfare schemes.

  • FCI procures wheat and paddy directly from farmers at the MSP, channelling grains into the central pool.
  • Procurement is conducted through state agencies in major producing states like Punjab, Haryana, Madhya Pradesh, and Uttar Pradesh.
  • The central pool stock forms the backbone of India's food security architecture, enabling price stabilization through Open Market Sale Scheme (OMSS) interventions.

Connection to this news: The crossing of 34 million tonnes represents a major replenishment of central pool stocks, which had been depleted after below-target procurement in recent seasons, improving buffer security heading into the lean season.

Minimum Support Price (MSP) and CACP's Role

The Minimum Support Price is a guaranteed floor price announced by the Government of India for 23 crops to protect farmers from price volatility. MSPs are recommended by the Commission for Agricultural Costs and Prices (CACP) — a statutory body under the Ministry of Agriculture — and approved by the Cabinet Committee on Economic Affairs (CCEA).

  • CACP considers cost of production (A2+FL and C2 costs), demand-supply conditions, international prices, and terms of trade between agriculture and non-agriculture while recommending MSPs.
  • The wheat MSP for 2026-27 was set at ₹2,585 per quintal, providing a 109% return over the A2+FL cost of production.
  • MSP is announced before the sowing season to guide farmer decision-making; procurement at MSP is operationalized through FCI and state agencies.

Connection to this news: The robust procurement at ₹2,585/quintal directly transferred income to millions of farmers while simultaneously building central pool reserves.

Buffer Stock Norms and Food Inflation Management

The Government of India maintains mandatory minimum buffer stocks of wheat and rice in the central pool, as prescribed by the Cabinet Committee on Economic Affairs. These norms set quarterly floor levels to ensure the government can intervene in markets during price spikes.

  • Buffer norms distinguish between operational stocks (needed for ongoing distribution under NFSA) and strategic reserves (held as emergency buffers).
  • When central pool stocks exceed buffer norms significantly, the government activates the Open Market Sale Scheme (OMSS) — releasing grains into the market to cool retail prices.
  • Revised periodically, buffer norms are calibrated to India's population, NFSA commitments, and historical consumption patterns.

Connection to this news: Procurement crossing 34 million tonnes ensures central pool stocks comfortably exceed prescribed buffer norms, reducing the risk of government market intervention being constrained by inadequate reserves during any price spike.

National Food Security Act (NFSA), 2013

The NFSA provides a legal entitlement to subsidized foodgrains for approximately 81.35 crore beneficiaries (about two-thirds of India's population). It covers priority households (5 kg per person per month at ₹1-3/kg) and Antyodaya Anna Yojana households (35 kg per household per month).

  • NFSA obligations require the government to maintain adequate procurement each season to fulfil distribution commitments across all states.
  • The central pool is the source from which state allocations under NFSA are made; shortfalls in procurement can force costly open-market purchases.
  • The Pradhan Mantri Garib Kalyan Ann Yojana (PMGKAY), which provides free foodgrains to NFSA beneficiaries, was made permanent from January 2024.

Connection to this news: Record procurement in RMS 2026-27 strengthens the government's ability to honour NFSA commitments through the year without resorting to expensive imports or deficit sourcing.

Key Facts & Data

  • Wheat procurement in RMS 2026-27: approximately 34+ million tonnes (vs. revised target of 34.497 million tonnes).
  • Previous season (RMS 2025-26) procurement: 30.035 million tonnes.
  • MSP for wheat, 2026-27: ₹2,585 per quintal (return of 109% over A2+FL cost).
  • Punjab procurement: 12.3 million tonnes (target 12.2 million tonnes — surpassed).
  • Haryana procurement: 8.089 million tonnes (target 7.5 million tonnes — surpassed).
  • NFSA beneficiaries covered by central pool distribution: approximately 81.35 crore persons.
  • Initial procurement target for 2026-27: 30.3 million tonnes, later revised upward to 34.497 million tonnes.
  • Wheat MSP is recommended by CACP and approved by CCEA; covers all 23 MSP-designated crops.
On this page
  1. What Happened
  2. Static Topic Bridges
  3. Food Corporation of India (FCI) and Central Procurement Mechanism
  4. Minimum Support Price (MSP) and CACP's Role
  5. Buffer Stock Norms and Food Inflation Management
  6. National Food Security Act (NFSA), 2013
  7. Key Facts & Data
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