Content
- Celebrating the Power of Vaccines
- 10,000 Farmer Producer Organisations (FPOs)
Celebrating the Power of Vaccines
Why in News ?
- India celebrated National Vaccination Day (16 March), highlighting achievements of Universal Immunisation Programme (UIP) and reaffirming commitment towards near-universal immunisation coverage and disease elimination.
- Launch of HPV vaccination campaign (1.15 crore girls target) and indigenous Td vaccine (55 lakh doses) marks expansion of India’s preventive healthcare architecture and self-reliance in vaccine manufacturing.
Relevance
- GS 1 (Society & Human Development):
Health indicators (IMR/MMR decline), demographic dividend, gender equity (HPV vaccination), social inclusion (zero-dose children) - GS 2 (Polity & Governance):
Right to health under Article 21, Directive Principles (Art 47), UIP implementation, cooperative federalism, last-mile delivery via ASHA/Anganwadi
Practice Question
Q. Vaccination programmes in India reflect the convergence of governance efficiency, economic rationality, and social justice. Critically analyse. (15 Marks)
Significance of Vaccination
Governance / Administrative Dimension
- Universal Immunisation Programme (UIP) is among the largest globally, covering 2.9 crore pregnant women and 2.54 crore newborns annually, reflecting scale, administrative capacity, and institutional depth in public health delivery.
- Implementation through NRHM/NHM framework, supported by ASHA, Anganwadi workers, ensures last-mile outreach, community mobilisation, and reduction of exclusion errors in immunisation coverage across rural and urban areas.
- Mission Indradhanush (2015 onwards) targeted left-out populations, vaccinating 5.46 crore children and 1.32 crore pregnant women, showcasing convergence-driven governance model for improving immunisation equity.
Constitutional / Policy Dimension
- Article 21 (Right to Life) interpreted by Supreme Court includes right to health, making immunisation a constitutional obligation of the State under welfare governance framework.
- Directive Principles (Article 47) mandate improvement of public health, guiding policies like UIP, Mission Indradhanush, and digital health initiatives aligned with welfare state philosophy.
- Reflects cooperative federalism, where Union ensures policy, funding, procurement, while States manage implementation and outreach, ensuring contextual adaptation of immunisation strategies.
Economic Dimension
- Vaccination yields high economic returns; WHO estimates $1 investment generates ~$44 returns, through reduced disease burden, increased productivity, and lower healthcare expenditure.
- Reduces Out-of-Pocket Expenditure (OOPE) on preventable diseases, thereby preventing impoverishment and supporting inclusive growth, especially among vulnerable and low-income populations.
- Strengthens human capital formation, ensuring healthier workforce participation, improved cognitive development in children, and long-term demographic dividend realisation.
Social Dimension
- Vaccination significantly reduces Infant Mortality Rate (IMR) and Maternal Mortality Ratio (MMR), contributing to improved survival outcomes and better quality of life indicators.
- Promotes gender equity, as seen in HPV vaccination targeting adolescent girls, addressing cervical cancer burden and advancing women’s health rights.
- Focus on zero-dose children (0.06%) highlights commitment to inclusivity, ensuring no child is left behind in access to essential public health services.
Environmental / Health Security Dimension
- Immunisation acts as a critical tool for epidemic prevention, reducing incidence of communicable diseases such as measles, Japanese Encephalitis, and tuberculosis.
- Strengthens pandemic preparedness, as demonstrated during COVID-19 vaccination (200+ crore doses), showcasing India’s capacity for rapid, large-scale health interventions.
- Supports One Health approach, reducing zoonotic disease risks and contributing to global health security frameworks.
Science & Technology Dimension
- Digital platforms like eVIN (cold chain monitoring), CoWIN (220 crore doses managed), and U-WIN (lifecycle immunisation tracking) enhance transparency, efficiency, and real-time governance.
- India’s position as ‘Pharmacy of the World’ (60% global vaccine supply) reflects strong biotechnology ecosystem and global leadership in vaccine manufacturing.
- Indigenous vaccine development (e.g., Td vaccine 2026) strengthens Atmanirbhar Bharat, reducing import dependence and ensuring supply security.
Universal Immunisation Programme
- UIP (1985) provides free vaccination against 12 vaccine-preventable diseases, targeting pregnant women, infants, children, and adolescents through a structured national immunisation schedule.
- Massive infrastructure includes 30,000 cold chain points, 1.06 lakh storage units, and 1.3 crore annual immunisation sessions, ensuring vaccine potency and last-mile delivery across diverse geographies.
- Continuous expansion through addition of vaccines like IPV, Rotavirus, MR, PCV, and recent HPV and Td vaccines, reflects adaptive and evolving immunisation policy framework.
Achievements & Data Evidence
- Full immunisation coverage increased from 62% (2015) to 98.4% (2026), indicating successful policy implementation and improved healthcare accessibility.
- Reduction in zero-dose children from 0.11% (2023) to 0.06% (2024) highlights effective targeting of vulnerable and hard-to-reach populations.
- Disease milestones include smallpox eradication (1977), polio elimination (2014 certification), and maternal & neonatal tetanus elimination, reflecting long-term success of vaccination strategies.
Challenges
- Persistent regional and socio-economic disparities in immunisation coverage, especially in urban slums, tribal areas, and migratory populations, indicate inequity despite high aggregate coverage levels.
- Rising vaccine hesitancy due to misinformation, cultural beliefs, and trust deficits poses significant challenge to achieving universal and sustained immunisation outcomes.
- Infrastructure gaps in cold chain maintenance and workforce capacity, particularly in remote areas, affect vaccine quality and delivery efficiency.
- Digital divide limits effectiveness of platforms like U-WIN, especially in areas with low digital literacy or connectivity constraints.
- Expanding vaccine basket increases financial burden on public health system, raising concerns about long-term sustainability of free universal immunisation.
Way Forward
- Transition towards life-cycle immunisation model, expanding coverage to adults and elderly, including vaccines for HPV, influenza, and tuberculosis, ensuring comprehensive preventive healthcare.
- Adopt data-driven targeting using AI and digital tools to identify zero-dose clusters and optimise resource allocation for improving equity in immunisation coverage.
- Strengthen last-mile delivery systems through capacity building, better incentives for ASHA workers, and deployment of mobile vaccination units in remote regions.
- Integrate U-WIN with Ayushman Bharat Digital Mission, enabling seamless health records, improved monitoring, and policy-level decision-making based on real-time data.
- Promote vaccine R&D and indigenous innovation, including next-generation platforms like mRNA vaccines, through public-private partnerships and increased health sector investments.
Prelims Pointers
- UIP launched in 1985, covers 12 diseases with free vaccination.
- Mission Indradhanush (2015) aims for 90%+ coverage.
- eVIN → cold chain, CoWIN → COVID vaccination, U-WIN → routine immunisation.
- HPV vaccine prevents cervical cancer, JE vaccine limited to endemic districts.
10,000 Farmer Producer Organisations (FPOs)
Why in News ?
- Government achieved milestone of 10,000 FPOs registered (as on 1st March 2026) under Central Sector Scheme, marking a major institutional reform in farmer collectivisation and agri-market integration.
- Notably, 1175 FPOs are 100% women-led, with 23.55 lakh women farmers enrolled, highlighting gender inclusion and empowerment in agricultural value chains.
Relevance
- GS 2 (Governance & Polity):
Institutional reform in agriculture, Central Sector Scheme implementation, role of CBBOs, cooperative federalism in agri-marketing reforms - GS 3 (Economy & Agriculture):
Farmer income enhancement, agri-value chain integration, economies of scale, market reforms, agri-entrepreneurship, food security
Practice Question
Q. Farmer Producer Organisations (FPOs) represent a shift from subsistence agriculture to market-oriented farming. Analyse their role in enhancing farmers’ income and discuss the challenges in ensuring their sustainability. (15 Marks)
Rationale Behind FPO Scheme
Economic Dimension
- Indian agriculture is dominated by small and marginal farmers (≈86%), leading to fragmented landholdings, low economies of scale, and weak market bargaining power.
- FPOs enable aggregation of produce and inputs, reducing transaction costs, improving price realisation, and facilitating integration with processing, storage, and export markets.
Governance / Institutional Dimension
- FPOs act as formal farmer institutions, bridging gap between farmers and markets, and enabling efficient implementation of schemes like PMFBY, e-NAM, and MSP procurement systems.
- Central Sector Scheme ensures uniform support, capacity building, and financial assistance, strengthening institutional ecosystem for farmer collectivisation across states.
Social / Equity Dimension
- Promotion of 1175 women-led FPOs with 23.55 lakh women farmers enhances gender inclusion, decision-making power, and financial independence in rural areas.
- FPOs help reduce rural inequality, enabling marginalised groups to access markets, credit, and technology collectively rather than individually.
Food Security & Sustainability Dimension
- Aggregation through FPOs promotes efficient input use, better crop planning, and diversification, contributing to sustainable agricultural practices and food system resilience.
- Facilitates adoption of climate-resilient agriculture, organic farming, and resource-efficient practices through collective knowledge dissemination and extension services.
Key Features of FPO Scheme
- Central Sector Scheme (2020) aims to form and promote 10,000 FPOs, providing financial, technical, and managerial support for a period of 5 years.
- Each FPO is supported by Cluster-Based Business Organisations (CBBOs) for handholding, capacity building, and ensuring business viability and professional management.
- Financial assistance includes equity grant (up to ₹15 lakh) and credit guarantee support (up to ₹2 crore), enabling access to institutional finance.
- FPOs function as producer-owned companies/cooperatives, engaged in input procurement, aggregation, processing, marketing, and value addition activities.
Significance of FPOs
Economic Empowerment of Farmers
- Enhances farmers’ bargaining power and price discovery, reducing dependence on intermediaries and ensuring better share in consumer price realisation.
Strengthening Value Chains
- Enables integration into agri-value chains, including storage, logistics, processing, branding, and exports, thereby increasing farmers’ income beyond primary production.
Women Empowerment
- Women-led FPOs promote financial inclusion, leadership roles, and livelihood diversification, contributing to gender equality and rural socio-economic transformation.
Institutional Reform in Agriculture
- Represents shift from subsidy-driven agriculture → institution-driven agriculture, focusing on collective action, entrepreneurship, and market orientation.
Boost to Rural Economy
- Generates non-farm employment opportunities in logistics, processing, and marketing, contributing to rural industrialisation and economic diversification.
Challenges / Concerns
Capacity & Professional Management Gaps
- Many FPOs lack managerial skills, business expertise, and governance structures, affecting operational efficiency and long-term sustainability.
Limited Access to Credit
- Despite schemes, FPOs face difficulty in accessing institutional finance, due to lack of collateral, credit history, and risk perception by banks.
Weak Market Linkages
- Inadequate integration with markets, processors, and exporters limits FPOs’ ability to realise full value of aggregation and scale advantages.
Regional Imbalances
- Uneven distribution of FPOs across states leads to regional disparities, with weaker penetration in eastern and northeastern regions.
Sustainability Concerns
- Dependence on government support raises concerns about financial viability post handholding period, questioning long-term sustainability of FPOs.
Way Forward
Strengthening Institutional Capacity
- Provide continuous training, professional management support, and governance frameworks to ensure FPOs function as sustainable business enterprises rather than subsidy-dependent entities.
Improving Credit Access
- Expand credit guarantee schemes, fintech solutions, and customised financial products, enabling easier and affordable access to institutional finance for FPOs.
Enhancing Market Linkages
- Integrate FPOs with e-NAM, agri-startups, food processing industries, and export markets, ensuring better price realisation and diversified income streams.
Promoting Women-Led FPOs
- Provide targeted incentives, capacity building, and market support to women-led FPOs, strengthening gender-inclusive agricultural growth.
Leveraging Technology
- Use digital platforms, AI-based advisories, and supply chain tracking systems, improving efficiency, transparency, and competitiveness of FPO operations.
Prelims Pointers
- 10,000 FPO Scheme → Central Sector Scheme (2020)
- Equity Grant: ₹15 lakh, Credit Guarantee: ₹2 crore
- CBBOs provide handholding support
- 1175 women FPOs, 23.55 lakh women farmers (2026 data)


