Context:
52% of agricultural households now earn additional income from non-agricultural activities, reflecting a growing trend toward income diversification.
- The working paper titled “Reimagining Annadata Households and Their Livelihoods Beyond the Farm” was published by People Research on India’s Consumer Economy (PRICE).
- The shift aims to build financial resilience against farming uncertainties caused by:
- Market volatility
- Climate events
- Economic shocks
Top States by Share of Agricultural Households with Non-Farm Income (2024–25)
- Nagaland: 98%
- Tripura: 94%
- Meghalaya: 85%
- Tamil Nadu: 83%
- Sikkim & Uttarakhand: 80% each
States With Highest Dependence on Farming Alone
- Arunachal Pradesh: 82%
- Punjab: 78%
- Assam: 77%
- Karnataka & Manipur: 73% each
Income Inequality Among Agricultural Households
- Average annual income (2024–25): ₹7.31 lakh
- Poor farmers: ₹2.03 lakh
- Rich farmers: ₹26 lakh
- Share of income from farming-related activities: 80% (₹5.77 lakh)
- Direct farming: 67.1%
- Allied activities (dairy/livestock): 7.4%
- Agricultural labour: 4.4%
- Share from non-farm sources:
- Non-agricultural business: 7.1%
- Salaried jobs: 3.4%
- Pension: 1.4%
- Remittances: Balance
States With Highest Average Annual Income for Agricultural Households
- Punjab: ₹20.1 lakh (₹16.2 lakh from farming alone)
- Haryana: ₹16.7 lakh
- Kerala: ₹11 lakh
- Mizoram & Tamil Nadu: Follow closely
States With Lowest Agricultural Household Income
- Chhattisgarh: ₹3.2 lakh
- Odisha: ₹4.15 lakh
- Jharkhand: ₹4.77 lakh