In a development that may have far-reaching implications for India’s agricultural policy and constitutional jurisprudence, the Supreme Court of India has issued notice to the Union Government on a plea seeking fixation of Minimum Support Price (MSP) based on the actual cost of cultivation (C2).
The case brings into sharp focus a long-standing agrarian concern whether farmers are being assured remunerative returns that genuinely reflect their input costs, and whether the State’s pricing framework meets constitutional standards of fairness and economic justice.
The Public Interest Litigation, filed under Article 32 of the Constitution, contends that the current MSP mechanism is fundamentally flawed as it is largely based on the A2+FL formula (paid-out costs plus family labour), which allegedly excludes key components such as land value, capital investment, and interest costs.
In contrast, the petitioners seek adoption of the C2 cost formula, which includes actual input costs, imputed value of family labour, rental value of owned land and interest on capital and working expenses. They argue that MSP fixed without incorporating these elements fails to reflect the true economic burden borne by farmers.
A Bench comprising Chief Justice of India Surya Kant and Justice Joymalya Bagchi issued notice to the Centre, while also acknowledging the complexity of the issue. During the hearing, the Court observed that determining components like land cost and capital investment may vary significantly across States, indicating the policy-intensive nature of the matter.
Justice Bagchi further remarked that granting the relief sought could effectively amount to judicial re-writing of economic policy, highlighting the delicate balance courts must maintain in such cases. Appearing for the petitioners, Advocate Prashant Bhushan argued that farmers across India are facing severe financial distress, with MSP often failing to even cover the cost of production. The plea points to farmer suicides linked to economic hardship, limited procurement beyond crops like wheat and rice and inability of farmers growing other crops to secure MSP prices
The petitioners clarified that they are not seeking a profit margin (such as C2+50%), but merely assurance of recovery of actual costs incurred: a minimum threshold for economic survival. Beyond price fixation, the petition also seeks directions for complete procurement of crops at MSP, creation of adequate infrastructure to ensure effective purchase and protection against market conditions where farmers are forced to sell below cost
This expands the scope of the case from pricing policy to implementation and enforcement of MSP as an effective economic safeguard. The MSP system, introduced as a market intervention mechanism to protect farmers from price crashes, currently covers 22 major crops and is fixed annually based on recommendations of the Commission for Agricultural Costs and Prices (CACP). However, its effectiveness remains uneven as procurement is largely concentrated in rice and wheat. Farmers growing other crops often sell below MSP due to lack of buyers. Awareness and access to MSP mechanisms remain limited
The present plea challenges not the existence of MSP, but its methodology and real-world efficacy. At its core, the case raises a fundamental constitutional question
Does the State’s MSP policy adequately safeguard the right to livelihood under Article 21? Indian constitutional jurisprudence has repeatedly expanded Article 21 to include right to livelihood, protection against economic exploitation and dignified means of sustenance
The petition implicitly argues that failure to ensure cost recovery may amount to systemic economic injustice, particularly in a sector employing a large portion of the population. The case also highlights a critical institutional tension as Economic policy traditionally falls within the executive domain and Courts intervene only where constitutional violations or arbitrariness are established
By issuing notice rather than granting immediate relief, the Supreme Court has adopted a measured approach, seeking to examine whether the MSP framework crosses the threshold of constitutional infirmity.
The outcome of this case could have significant consequences. It may influence future MSP calculations and policy reforms. It could strengthen demands for legal enforceability of MSP. It may redefine the extent of judicial review over economic policies impacting fundamental rights. Most importantly, it places the spotlight on a crucial issue whether agricultural policy in India is aligned with the economic realities of those it seeks to protect.
The Supreme Court’s intervention in the MSP dispute signals a renewed judicial engagement with agrarian distress and economic rights. While the Court remains cautious about encroaching into policy-making, the case underscores a deeper constitutional concern: a welfare State cannot ignore the economic sustainability of its farmers, especially when policy frameworks fail to ensure even recovery of production costs. As the matter proceeds, it may well shape the future discourse on farmers’ rights, State responsibility, and the constitutional limits of economic governance in India.

