Maharashtra: Agriculture Status for Livestock and Poultry

1. Historical Milestone

Maharashtra has become the first state in India to grant agriculture-equivalent status to livestock and poultry farming. Approved by the State Cabinet on July 11, 2025, this decision shifts animal husbandry from being an “allied activity” to a core pillar of the agricultural sector.

  • Beneficiaries: Approximately 37 million livestock farmers (76.41 lakh families).
  • Objective: To create policy parity between crop cultivators and livestock farmers, ensuring equitable access to government support.
  • Economic Impact: Projected to add over ₹7,080 crore annually to the rural economy.

2. Key Benefits and Concessions

By granting this status, the government has extended several “crop-farmer” benefits to those in the dairy, poultry, and fishery sectors:

  • Subsidised Electricity: Poultry sheds, cattle shelters, and fish ponds now qualify for agricultural power tariffs, significantly reducing high commercial operational costs.
  • Institutional Credit: Livestock farmers are now eligible for Kisan Credit Cards (KCC) and low-interest loans (up to 4% interest subvention) under schemes like the Punjabrao Deshmukh Interest Subsidy Scheme.
  • Tax Relief: Local taxes and levies by Gram Panchayats will be calculated at agricultural rates rather than commercial rates.
  • Solar Subsidies: Access to subsidies for solar-powered pumps, sheds, and infrastructure on par with traditional agriculture.

3. Eligibility Criteria for Benefits

To target small and medium-scale farmers and prevent “elite capture” by large industries, the government has set specific capacity limits:

SectorEligibility Limit (per unit)
Poultry (Broilers)Up to 25,000 birds
Poultry (Layers)Up to 50,000 birds
HatcheriesUp to 45,000 bird capacity
DairyUp to 100 milch animals
Goat / SheepUp to 500 animals
PiggeryUp to 200 animals
  • Exclusions: Large-scale commercial breeder units and animal-product processing industries do not qualify for these specific agricultural concessions.

4. Strategic Significance

  • GSDP Contribution: While traditional agriculture contributes ~12% to Maharashtra’s Gross State Domestic Product (GSDP), animal husbandry contributes nearly 24% of the agricultural sector’s revenue.
  • National Alignment: The move aligns with NITI Aayog (2021) and ICAR recommendations to integrate livestock into broader agricultural frameworks for scientific development and disease control.
  • Employment: Provides a safety net for marginal and landless farmers, for whom livestock is often the primary source of income during crop failures.
Scroll to Top