Abstract: Contract farming has emerged as a significant strategy for modernizing agriculture, enhancing productivity, and integrating smallholders into more profitable markets in India. This study examines the evolution, models, benefits, and challenges of contract farming in India. This study employs a descriptive methodology, utilizing existing data and literature from various sources. The findings indicate that contract farming provides farmers with access to inputs, credit, technical advice, and market opportunities, potentially improving their income and product quality. Different models of contract farming exist, including centralized, nucleus estate, multipartite, informal, and intermediary. While offering benefits such as risk sharing and income stability, contract farming faces challenges such as power imbalances, biased contracts, a lack of suitable institutions, and potentially negative impacts on traditional farming practices. The legal and policy framework for contract farming in India has evolved, with key developments including the Model APMC Act (2003) and the Farm Acts of 2020 (later repealed). Farmer-Producer Organizations (FPOs) play an increasingly important role in enhancing the collective bargaining power and market access of small farmers. Case studies reveal both successes and conflicts in contract-farming arrangements. The effectiveness of contract farming depends on factors such as contract design, institutional support, and specific agricultural and economic contexts. The study concludes that while contract farming offers significant potential for agricultural development and improved farmer livelihoods in India, its success depends on addressing power imbalances, ensuring fair contracts, and developing robust institutional and legal frameworks.
WBES Dr. Jyotirmoy Koley (Mon,) studied this question.