India’s rural economy is undergoing a significant transformation, with agriculture and allied sectors employing nearly 46 per cent of the workforce while contributing about 17–18 per cent to GDP, as highlighted in the Economic Survey 2025–26.
This showcases the immense opportunity to enhance value creation through agripreneurship. As India moves towards higher productivity and diversification, improving rural incomes will increasingly depend on shifting from subsistence farming to enterprise-led growth.
Agripreneurship offers a powerful pathway to enable this transition by turning farmers into business-oriented producers who can leverage technology, access markets, and build sustainable income streams.
The question is; how can this be further accelerated?
Making agriculture more enterprising
A new generation of rural producers is already beginning to view agriculture as a business ecosystem rather than a fallback livelihood. Through better use of technology, improved supply chains, and collective institutions like Farmer Producer Organisations (FPOs), agripreneurship is helping agriculture evolve into a more income-oriented and scalable model.
Anchoring agri-enterprise in community institutions
This transformation becomes more effective when anchored in strong grassroots institutions such as Self Help Groups (SHGs), Producer Groups (PGs), and Cluster Level Federations (CLFs), which help identify entrepreneurs, foster accountability, and ensure local ownership—making agripreneurial growth more inclusive and sustainable. Experience shows that when entrepreneurship is channelled through community platforms, risks are shared, participation deepens, and scale becomes more sustainable.
Strengthening women’s economic participation towards agricultural eco-system
Women’s participation is emerging as a key driver of agripreneurship-led growth. Budget 2026’s focus on initiatives such as SHE (Self-Help Entrepreneur) Marts, aligned with the Lakhpati Didi vision, signals a move from credit-linked participation toward enterprise ownership for women. However, credit alone is insufficient. Women often face barriers such as limited market exposure, fear of failure, and lack of collateral. SHGs and federations can address these through peer mentoring, collective marketing, and shared learning ecosystems, enabling more women to transition into confident and capable agripreneurs.
Bridging information gaps through digital platforms
The proposed Bharat-VISTAAR (Virtually Integrated System to Access Agricultural Resources), multilingual AI platform represents a major opportunity. Small and medium landholders, particularly women farmers, often lack timely and contextual advisory support. By delivering region-specific insights on cropping decisions, input use, weather risks, market prices, and government schemes in local languages, digital platforms will support farmers to make enterprise-oriented rather than production-only decisions.
Promoting local value addition and market linkages
Another crucial lever for strengthening agripreneurship is the promotion of local value addition and stronger market linkages. Smallholder producers frequently sell raw produce at low prices while value accrues elsewhere. By enabling processing, branding, storage, and direct market access—especially through economic collectives like FPO-led value chains—agripreneurs can retain a larger share of economic value within rural communities. Digital platforms further enhance this by connecting producers directly to buyers and improving price realisation.
Expanding access to finance
Access to finance also plays a defining role in scaling agripreneurship. The RBI’s proposal to increase collateral-free MSME loans to ₹20 lakh from April 2026 is a significant step toward addressing long-standing financing challenges in rural areas, where unclear land titles and limited assets often restrict borrowing. Improved access to credit enables agripreneurs to invest in machinery, adopt semi-automated processes, and upgrade packaging and branding—thereby supporting both enterprise creation and expansion.
Building skills through blended capacity ecosystems
Credit and technology must be reinforced by strong training systems. Blended capacity-building models, combining classroom inputs with field-level mentoring have proven more effective than standalone workshops. Training modules that integrate financial literacy, enterprise planning, quality standards, digital adoption, and market linkages equip farmers and rural youth to build viable businesses. Civil Society Organisations (CSOs) play a critical bridging role here, mobilising communities, strengthening institutions, and enabling convergence across government departments to unlock infrastructure and technical support.
Agripreneurship, therefore, represents a structural shift in rural economic participation. With coordinated efforts from communities, local governance institutions, governments, financial institutions, donor agencies and civil society, India can transition from a subsistence-driven rural economy to one powered by enterprise and innovation. If supported by strong institutions, inclusive digital access, gender-sensitive approaches, and improved credit availability, agripreneurship can significantly enhance rural livelihoods and contribute meaningfully to the vision of Viksit Bharat 2047.
(The author is Executive Director at Professional Assistance For Development Action (PRADAN).
Published on April 11, 2026





















