CM Yogi gets MSP extension, 6.18 lakh PMAY-G homes for UP
Synopsis
Key Takeaways
The Chief Minister's Office of Uttar Pradesh announced on Thursday, 25 June 2026 that Chief Minister Yogi Adityanath participated in a high-level meeting on Uttar Pradesh's agriculture roadmap at Yojana Bhawan, Lucknow, chaired by Union Minister for Agriculture, Farmers Welfare and Rural Development Shivraj Singh Chouhan.
Context
During the meeting, Union Minister Chouhan handed CM Yogi Adityanath an approval letter extending the Minimum Support Price (MSP) procurement window for rabi crops — including wheat, gram (chana), and lentil (masoor) — under the Rabi Marketing Year 2026–27 from 24 June to 8 July 2026. The extension gives farmers in Uttar Pradesh additional time to sell their produce at government-assured floor prices, a critical safeguard for the state's large agricultural community.
A second approval letter was also presented, sanctioning 6,18,482 pucca (permanent) houses for rural households in Uttar Pradesh under a new phase of Pradhan Mantri Awas Yojana–Gramin (PMAY-G). The twin approvals signal a concentrated push by the Centre on both farm-income support and rural infrastructure in India's most populous state.
Policy Backdrop
PMAY-Gramin was launched in 2016 with the objective of providing pucca housing to all eligible rural households. The scheme has undergone successive phases and target revisions, with Uttar Pradesh consistently figuring among its largest beneficiary states owing to the sheer scale of its rural population. The fresh sanction of over 6.18 lakh houses represents a significant addition to the state's rural housing pipeline.
MSP procurement calendars for rabi crops are fixed annually by the central government, with state-specific extensions granted when procurement volumes or logistical conditions warrant more time. Such extensions are formally communicated through approval letters from the Union Ministry of Agriculture, as was done at today's meeting. Uttar Pradesh is one of India's leading producers of wheat, making the extension particularly consequential for farmers in the state.
Stakeholders and Impact
The MSP extension directly benefits wheat, gram, and lentil farmers across Uttar Pradesh who may not have been able to complete their sales before the earlier deadline. By extending the procurement window to 8 July 2026, the government provides a buffer against post-harvest distress selling in open markets at prices below the MSP. Farmer bodies and agricultural cooperatives operating procurement centres will now have additional weeks to absorb pending stocks.
The PMAY-G sanction of 6,18,482 homes targets rural households currently living in kutcha (non-permanent) structures. Beneficiaries — typically from economically weaker sections — receive financial assistance to construct pucca homes, which also carry associated benefits such as improved sanitation and cooking-fuel connections under convergent central schemes. The scale of the fresh sanction underscores UP's continued priority status in central rural welfare allocations.
What's Next
State agencies will now operationalise the extended MSP procurement window, coordinating with mandis and procurement centres to ensure farmers can access the support price until 8 July 2026. For PMAY-G, the Uttar Pradesh government will need to identify and verify beneficiaries, release funds tranches, and set construction timelines under the new phase. Both rollouts will be closely watched as indicators of Centre-state coordination on flagship welfare programmes ahead of the next agricultural season.