A decade after PM Modi assumed office in 2014, the farm sector in 2025 stands transformed, from a system once marked by low productivity, price uncertainty and import dependence into one defined by record output, assured farmer incomes, scientific innovation and long-term self-reliance.
What makes 2025 significant is not a single scheme or statistic, but the consolidation of eleven years of reform into a coherent, future-ready agricultural architecture.
From Fragmentation to Focus
Launched in 2025, the Pradhan Mantri Dhan-Dhaanya Krishi Yojana (PMDDKY) marked a shift toward targeted, outcome-driven agricultural reform. Announced in the Union Budget 2025–26 and approved by the Union Cabinet in July, the scheme focuses on 100 underperforming districts and aims to benefit 1.7 crore farmers, with an annual outlay of ₹24,000 crore to address low productivity, water stress and credit gaps.
By converging 36 agricultural schemes across 11 ministries, PMDDKY replaces fragmented implementation with district-level coordination. Inspired by the ADP, it prioritises irrigation, storage, technology, training and institutional credit, signalling a move toward mission-mode agricultural transformation and Atmanirbhar Bharat.
Pulses: A Strategic Leap Toward Self-Reliance
In 2025, India launched the Mission for Aatmanirbharta in Pulses to reduce import dependence, with an outlay of ₹11,440 crore. The mission targets 350 lakh tonnes of pulse production and 310 lakh hectares of cultivation by 2030–31.
For the first time, farmers growing tur, urad and masoor are assured 100% MSP procurement for four years, backed by large-scale quality seed distribution. Benefitting nearly 2 crore farmers, the mission strengthens value chains, stabilises incomes and advances nutritional security, marking a decisive move toward self-reliance in pulses.
Strengthening the Farm–Industry Link: Cotton Mission
The five-year Cotton Mission, announced in the Union Budget 2025–26, focuses on boosting productivity, particularly in extra-long staple cotton, through science and technology support for farmers.
By ensuring a steady supply of quality cotton, the mission strengthens India’s textile sector, where 80% of capacity is MSME-driven, and reinforces the 5F vision of connecting farms to global markets, making agriculture a key driver of industrial competitiveness.
Record Production: The Outcome of a Decade of Reform
The impact of these policy choices was clearly visible in 2025. India achieved a historic all-time high foodgrain production of 357.73 million tonnes in 2024–25, as released by the Ministry of Agriculture in November 2025.
This represents an increase of over 106 million tonnes compared to 2015–16, when production stood at 251.54 million tonnes, the highest rise recorded in the past ten years.
Key highlights announced in 2025 include:
- Rice production at a record 1,501.84 lakh tonnes
- Wheat output at 1,179.45 lakh tonnes, with the highest year-on-year increase in recent history
- Pulses production reaching 256.83 lakh tonnes
- Oilseeds touching a record 429.89 lakh tonnes
In the first quarter of 2025, India’s agriculture sector recorded 3.7% growth, placing it among the fastest-growing agricultural economies in the world, an outcome that underscores the structural stability achieved under PM Modi’s leadership.
MSP: From Policy Promise to Income Protection
A critical pillar of this transformation has been the strengthening of Minimum Support Price (MSP). Before 2014, MSP often remained symbolic due to limited procurement. Under Prime Minister Modi, MSP has been institutionalised as a genuine income protection mechanism.
In 2025, the government approved enhanced MSPs for 14 Kharif crops and all mandated Rabi crops, strictly following the principle of fixing MSP at 1.5 times the cost of production.
The decade-long comparison is telling:
- Paddy procurement (2014–15 to 2024–25) reached 7,608 lakh metric tonnes, compared to 4,590 LMT in the preceding decade
- MSP payments to paddy farmers rose to ₹14.16 lakh crore, more than three times the amount paid before 2014
- Total MSP payout for 14 Kharif crops reached ₹16.35 lakh crore, compared to ₹4.75 lakh crore earlier
By 2025, MSP had evolved from an announcement into a dependable economic guarantee for farmers.
Science and Sustainability at the Core
In 2025, India became the first country in the world to develop and release genome-edited rice varieties, marking a global first in agricultural science.
The two varieties, DRR Dhan 100 (Kamala) and Pusa DST Rice 1, offer significantly higher yields, earlier maturity and tolerance to salinity and alkalinity. Cultivation over the recommended area is expected to generate 4.5 million tonnes of additional paddy, reduce production costs and enhance climate resilience.
Sustainability was equally emphasised. Maharashtra’s installation of 45,911 off-grid solar agricultural pumps in just 30 days, recognised by Guinness World Records in 2025, symbolised India’s rapid transition toward green agriculture.
Agriculture as a National Priority
Public investment mirrors this strategic focus. Budgetary allocation for the Department of Agriculture & Farmers Welfare has risen sharply, from ₹21,933.50 crore in 2013–14 to ₹1,27,290.16 crore in 2025–26, reflecting the priority accorded to farmers under Prime Minister Modi’s government.
Conclusion: 2025—A Year of Confidence for Indian Farmers
The year 2025 stands as a culmination of a decade of agricultural reform under PM Modi. It showcased how consistent policy, assured prices, scientific innovation and integrated governance can rebuild confidence in farming.
From record foodgrain production and strengthened MSP to transformative missions like PMDDKY and Aatmanirbharta in Pulses, Indian agriculture in 2025 is no longer defined by vulnerability. It is defined by stability, self-reliance and aspiration—firmly aligned with the Prime Minister’s vision of Atmanirbhar Bharat and Viksit Bharat.
(Courtesy: Press Information Bureau)



