CM Mohan Yadav transfers ₹1,460 cr PMFBY funds to 10.54 lakh MP farmers
Synopsis
Key Takeaways
The Chief Minister's Office of Madhya Pradesh announced on Sunday, 19 July 2026 that Chief Minister Dr. Mohan Yadav transferred ₹1,460.25 crore to the bank accounts of 10 lakh 54 thousand farmers across the state under the Pradhan Mantri Fasal Bima Yojana (PMFBY) for the Kharif 2025 season, using a single-click digital transfer mechanism at a cabinet meeting held in Jagdishpur, Bhopal.
Context
The official post read: 'मुख्यमंत्री डॉ. मोहन यादव ने आज भोपाल के जगदीशपुर में आयोजित कैबिनेट बैठक के अवसर पर प्रदेश के 10 लाख 54 हजार किसानों के खातों में प्रधानमंत्री फसल बीमा योजना के अंतर्गत खरीफ 2025 के लिए ₹1460.25 करोड़ की राशि सिंगल क्लिक के माध्यम से अंतरित की।' — 'Chief Minister Dr. Mohan Yadav, on the occasion of the cabinet meeting held in Jagdishpur, Bhopal today, transferred an amount of ₹1,460.25 crore for Kharif 2025 under the Pradhan Mantri Fasal Bima Yojana into the accounts of 10 lakh 54 thousand farmers of the state through a single click.'
The transfer was executed through the Direct Benefit Transfer (DBT) mechanism, with funds routed directly into Aadhaar-linked bank accounts of the beneficiary farmers, bypassing intermediaries.
Policy Backdrop
Pradhan Mantri Fasal Bima Yojana was launched nationally in 2016, replacing earlier crop insurance programmes, to provide subsidised premium coverage and direct compensation for yield losses caused by natural calamities, pests, or adverse weather. Madhya Pradesh has consistently ranked among the top states in the country by area enrolled under the scheme.
The state began large-scale single-click DBT disbursals under PMFBY from 2017-18 onwards, following integration with the national crop insurance portal. The use of a cabinet meeting venue in Jagdishpur — outside the main secretariat — reflects a broader pattern of state governments combining administrative announcements with on-ground visibility in constituencies and districts.
Premium costs under PMFBY are shared between the Central government and state governments, with farmers paying a capped subsidised share — 2 per cent for Kharif crops — while the remaining burden is absorbed by the two tiers of government.
Stakeholder Impact
The 10.54 lakh farmer beneficiaries span rainfed and irrigated farming belts across Madhya Pradesh, a predominantly agrarian state where Kharif crops such as soybean, paddy, and maize are critical to rural household incomes. For many smallholder and marginal farmers, PMFBY payouts serve as the primary financial buffer against crop failure.
The single-click transfer model eliminates delays historically associated with manual processing and intermediary disbursal, ensuring that compensation reaches farmers at the start of the next agricultural cycle — a timing that is particularly significant as farmers prepare land for the Rabi 2025-26 sowing season.
What's Next
Attention will now shift to Rabi 2025-26 enrolment figures under PMFBY and any state-level review of premium subsidy sharing arrangements between the Centre and Madhya Pradesh. The government's ability to sustain this scale of direct farm welfare transfers will be closely watched against the state's fiscal position and the pace of claim settlements from the national crop insurance portal.