TYBMS - V Sem Rural Marketing
TYBMS - V Sem Rural Marketing
TYBMS - V Sem Rural Marketing
RURAL MARKETING
DEFINITION
Market:
‘Market means not a particular market place in which things are bought and sold
but the whole of any region in which buyers and sellers are in such a free
intercourse with one another that the prices of the same goods tend to equality,
easily and quickly.’-Cournot
Marketing:
‘Marketing as a process by which goods and services are exchanged and their
value is determined in terms of money prices.’ – H. E. Mitchell
Agricultural Marketing:
According to National Commission on Agriculture – XII Report “Agricultural
marketing is the process which starts with a decision to produce a suitable farm
commodity or product & it involves all aspects of market structure or systems,
both functional and institutional, based on technical and economic considerations
and include pre and post harvest operations like assembling, grading, storage,
transportation, and distribution. ”
1. Ancient period
2. Medieval period
3. Colonial period
4. Post independence/ modern period
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Ancient period:
During the ancient period barter system was present where people used to
exchange their goods or commodities in terms of another commodity.
Kautilya in Arthashastra has mentioned that trade, commerce and finance formed
the basis of the state.
Medieval period:
During the medieval period the main four kingdoms were:
a. Delhi Sultan’s Dynasty.
b. Mughal Dynasty.
c. Vijayanagar kingdom.
d. Peshwas Regime.
Mughal Dynasty:
Mughal controlled the sea – borne trade in Indian marine territories right
from eastern coast of Africa up to the straits of Marucca.
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Vijaynagar Kingdom:
Peshwas Regime:
External trade: China, Afghanistan and Persia.
Internal trade: Was carried out through water and land
Main commodities: sugar, spices, dry fruits, and food grains.
Trade centers: Poona, Satara, Kolhpur, Nasik, Solapur, Kalyan and Miraj.
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Colonial period:
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1. RURAL CONSUMER:
a. Size of rural consumer population
Majority of the population of India still exist in the Rural Area itself. States
like Uttar Pradesh, Madhya Pradesh, Rajasthan and Kerala have > 80% of the
population in the Rural areas only. While, States like Bihar and Orissa still have >
90% in the Rural area.
b. Consumer Characteristics:
Low purchasing power
Low standard of living
Low per capita income
Low literacy level
Low economic and social position
Tradition bound community
Religion, culture and even superstition
c. Location Pattern
Urban: Population concentrated in 3200 cities & towns
Rural: Population scattered over 576000 villages.
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d. Literacy level:
Rural India – 23% literacy as compared with 36% of whole country
In absolute numbers 11.5 crore of literate people are in Rural India
compared with 12 crore in urban India.
Every year 60 lakh is getting added to the literate population of rural
India.
e. Rural income:
Evidently, rural prosperity and the discretionary income with the rural
consumer are directly tied with agricultural prosperity because, nearly, 60% of
rural income is from Agriculture.
Inference: Rural Demand is Seasonal and Festival linked.
f. Rural savings:
The commercial and co-operative banks have been marketing the saving
habit in the rural areas for quite some years. 70% of rural households are
saving and majority of them belong to salary earners and self-employees non
-farmers.
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No. of consumers
Large is in terms of
Business
2. Heterogeneous Market:
The relative status of the rural areas of different states differs. Parameters on
which they differ are Health and education facilities, nature of facilities,
availability of public transport, electricity, TV transmission, banks, post offices,
water supply etc.
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IMRB study reveals that an average village in India has 33 development index
points, Kerala’s average Is 88; Bihar’s average is just 22; while MP, Rajasthan
and UP are close to Bihar; and states like Maharashtra, Haryana, Karnataka
range between 40 and so.
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9. Marketing Efforts:
Firms like HLL, Bajaj Auto, Godrej soaps, BFL, BrookeBond, etc. have started
penetrating rural market.
10. Media:
Role of newspapers, radio, T.V., etc. has given rise to new demand for goods
and services.
While the rural market of India certainly offers a big attraction to markets, it would
be totally naïve to think that any firm can easily enter the market and walk away
with a sizeable share of it.
- What are these problems?
- How are they peculiar to the rural market?
- How does a firm solve them?
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i. Transportation problem:
Railway: Though India has the fourth largest railway system in the world; many
parts of the rural India remain outside the rail network.
Road: Nearly 50% of the 576000 villages in the country are not connected by
roads at all. The government had planned to connect at least the bigger villages,
i.e. villages with a population of 1500 or above, with all – weather roads by 1990
– but this is not accomplished yet.
Many parts of rural India have only kuchha roads and many parts of the rural
interiors are totally unconnected by roads with any mandi level town.
Business firms find it quite difficult to get suitable godowns in many parts of rural
India, and there are no public warehousing agencies in the interiors of rural India.
- At villages
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Cost-service dilemma –
Maintaining the required service in the delivery of the products at the retail level
becomes very difficult. At the same time, physical distribution costs gets
escalated with 80% of the total rural consumers living in the less than 1000
people category of villages. It means higher costs of transportation; higher
inventory carrying costs and transit or storage losses.
1. The Firm can share Physical Distribution responsibility with its stockists
or clearing – cum – forwarding agents:
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With a view to keeping the costs low, some of the firms try out remote
control marketing – simply consigning the goods and retiring the bills
through banks – unfavourable for the long term.
Instead, the firms have a network of stockists or c & f agents at the
strategic locations for facilitating Physical Distribution of its products in
the rural areas.
Advantage – The costs of physical distribution can be shared by the
firm and the stockists.
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Rural Consumer
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Solutions:
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They are the main channel in the rural market for a large variety of consumer
products; they are also the cheapest and the most convenient channel to align
with.
According to the Operations Research Group (ORG) there are 2.02 sales outlet
in rural India.
It is quite natural that firms seeking an effective presence in rural marketing,
willingly embrace the private village shops. It has to select its outlets from out of
existing shopkeepers or select a few freshers & appoint them as the outlets. The
choices are usually confined to the following categories :-
- Existing traditional private shops.
- Moneylenders willing to branch off to trade.
- Land owners willing to branch off to trade.
- Educated unemployed persons.
Satellite Distribution:
The firm appoints stockists in feeder tours. They take care of financing of
goods, warehousing of goods and sub-distribution of goods in the area covered
by the feeder town. The firm also appoints a no.of retailers in and around the
feeder towns and attaches them to the stockists. The firm supplies the goods to
the stockists either on cash or credit or on consignment basis. The stockists take
care of the sub-distribution job or the terms or conditions determined by the firm.
Over a period of time, some retailers grow in terms of business
turnover. If such retail points also happen to be transportation centers within the
feeder town area, the firm elevates them as stockists. The area of operation of
the original stockists shrinks in this process, but care is taken to see that his
volume of business does not shrink. This is achieved, in practice, on account of
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the growth in demand & deeper market penetration. The process continues as
long as the market keeps expanding.
Advantages:
It helps & facilitates market penetration in the interiors of rural market.
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Solutions
1. Selecting the media mix:
Evidently, in the rural context the firm has to choose a combination of formal
and non-formal media.
Formal / Organised : TV, Cinema, Press, Other print media, direct mail, radio,
point of purchase (POPs), outdoors, etc.
Non-formal / rural Specific Media :
A V vans / Publicity vans, Dance-dramas, Puppet Shows, rural specific art
forms like Harikatha and Villupatu performed at village melas and temple
festivals, demonstrations, study classes, mike announcements, processions,
caparisoned elephants, decorated bullocks carts carrying ad panels, music
records, house to house campaigns by special promotion squads, information
centers on companies products.
Out doors :Hoardings, wall paintings, illuminations and other displays in rural
areas.
Pops :More than written words, symbols, pictures and colours must be used.
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A V vans :Films can exhibit its films or other A-V presentations such as slide
shows, sound or sight presentations, puppet shows, etc. The van is a
comprehensive mobile promotion station at the exclusive command of the
concerned firm. Portable exhibition kits can be carried in the vans.
Dimensions of Market:
1. Based on Location
2. Based on Area / Coverage
3. Based on Time Span
4. Based on Volume of Transaction
5. Based on Nature of Transaction
6. Based on Degree of Competition
7. Based on Number of Commodities
8. Based on Nature of Commodities
9. Based on Stage of Marketing
10. Based on Extent of Public Intervention
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Classification of Markets
1. Location:
Village Markets – Located in small villages, major transaction
takes place among buyers and sellers of a village.
Primary Wholesale Market – Located in big towns, near center of
production of agricultural commodities, a major part of produce is
brought for sale by the producer-farmer themselves. Transaction is
between farmers and traders. Owned by market committees, local
bodies / private individuals and are periodically held wherein every
shopkeeper has to pay rent for the space he occupies.
Secondary Wholesale Markets – Located in district head quarters
/ important trade centers / near railway junctions, major transaction
takes place between village traders and wholesalers. The bulk arrival
in these markets is from other markets. The produce in these markets
is handled in large quantities. There are specialized marketing
agencies performing different functions such as; commission agents,
brokers, weighmen.
Terminal Markets – where the produce is finally disposed off
directly to the consumer / processor / assembled for export and
possesses sufficient warehousing and storage facilities covering a
wide area extending over a state or two.
Sea board Markets – Located near sea shore, meant for import /
export of goods.
2. Area / Coverage:
Local / Village Markets – Buying and selling activities are confined
among buyers and sellers drawn from same village or nearby
villages, mostly perishable commodities in small lots. Ex: fresh milk,
vegetables
Regional Markets – buyers and sellers for commodities are drawn
from a larger area. Ex: foograins
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National Market - buyers and sellers are at national level. Ex: dural
commodities like jute, tea
World Market - buyers and sellers are drawn from whole world. Ex:
coffee, gold, silver, cotton
3. Time Span:
Short period Market – few hours, products of highly perishable
nature. Ex: fish, milk
Long Period Markets – larger period, less perishable. Ex:
foodgrains, oilseeds
Secular Markets – permanent nature. Ex: manufacture goods,
timber
4. Volume of Transaction:
Wholesale Markets – Commodities are bought and sold in large
quantities / bulk. Transaction is between traders.
Retail Markets – Commodities are bought and sold as per
consumer requirements.
5. Nature of Transaction:
a. Spot or Cash Market: A market in which goods are exchanged for
money immediately after the sale.
b. Forward Market: Purchase and sale of commodities takes place at
time ‘t’ but the exchange of commodity takes place on some specific date
in future i.e. ‘t+1’.
6. No of Commodities:
a. General Market: All types of commodities such as food grains, oilseed, fibre
crops etc. are bought and sold.
b. Specialised Market: Transactions take place only in one or two commodities
e.g. food grains market, cotton markets, mango markets.
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7. Degree of competition:
a. Perfect Market: Large number of buyers and sellers.
b. Imperfect Market: Monopoly, Duopoly, Oligopoly, Monopolistic competition
large no of sellers deal in heterogeneous and differentiated form of a
commodity.
8. Nature of Commodities:
a. Commodity Market: deals in goods and raw materials such as wheat, barley,
cotton etc.
b. Capital Market: deals with bonds, shares and securities.
c. Service Market: deals in providing service e.g. consultancy
9. Stage of marketing:
a. Producing market: Those markets, which mainly assemble the commodities
for future distribution to other markets. Located in producing areas.
b. Consuming Markets: Which collect the produce for final disposal to the
consuming population located in areas where production is inadequate or in
thickly populated urban centers.
10. Extent of public intervention:
a. Regulated markets: Markets in which business is done in accordance with the
rules and regulations framed by the statutory market organisation and
represent different sections involved in markets. The marketing costs are
b. Unregulated markets: Business is conducted without any set rules and
regulations. Traders frame the rules for the conduct of business and run the
market.
METHODS OF SALE:
1. Under cover of a cloth (Hatha system):
The prices of the produce are settled by the buyer and the commission agent of
the seller by pressing/twisting the fingers of each other under cover of a piece of
cloth. Code symbols are associated with the twisting of the fingers and traders
are familiar with these. The negotiations in this manner continue till a final price is
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settled. When all the buyers have given their offers, the name and the offer price
of the highest bidder is announced to the seller by the c.a.
Disadvantage: Provides opportunities for cheating the seller this system has
been abolished by the government.
2. Private Negotiations:
Unregulated markets. The individual buyers come to the shops of commission
agent at a time convenient to the latter and offer price for the produce which, they
think are appropriate after the inspection of the sample. If the price is accepted
the commission agent conveys the decision to the seller and the produce is given
after it has been weighed, to the buyer. In village, private negotiations take place
directly between the buyer and seller.
Disadvantage: Time consuming, slow, not suitable when either large
quantities have to be sold or a large number of buyers exist in the market.
Advantage: Seller gets good price, for buyers are not aware of the price
offered by other buyers.
3. Quotations on sample, taken by commission agent:
The commission agent takes the sample of the produce to the shops of the
buyer. The price is offered, based on the sample, by the prospective buyers. The
commission agent makes a number of rounds to prospective buyers until none is
ready to bid a higher price then the one offered by a particular buyer. The
produce is given to highest bidder.
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Advantage:
1. Fair dealing to all the parties.
2. Auction serves as meeting place for supply of and demand of the goods.
3. It disposes of the market supply promptly.
4. The payment of the price of goods is made immediately after the sale if an
auction has been completed.
Disadvantages:
1. Requires more time for both buyer and seller have to wait for the day and
rime of auction.
2. In big market centers, especially in peak marketing season the time allotted
for auction is short. As a result sellers may receive a low price.
3. Buyers sometimes join hands.
4. Auction leads to a buyer market for buyers have full information about the
supply of and demand for the product.
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MARKETING AGENCIES
1. Producers
2. Middlemen:
i) Merchant Middlemen- Wholesalers, Retailers, Beoparies.
ii) Agent Middlemen- Commission Agents, Arahatias, Brokers.
iii) Speculative Middlemen- Those middlemen who take title to the product
with a view to making a profit on it. They specialise in risk-taking.
iv) Facilitative Middlemen- some middlemen do not buy and sell directly
but assist in the marketing process. E.g. Hamals/Labourers,
Weighmen/Tolas, Grades, Transport Agency, Communication
Agencies, Advertising Agencies, etc.
1) Beoparis:
Village Beoparis have their small establishments in villages. They purchase the
produce of those who have either taken finance from them or those who are not
able to go to the market. Village beoparis also supply essential consumption
goods to the farmers. They act as financiers of poor farmers. They often visit
nearby markets or keep in touch with the prevailing prices. They either sell the
collected produce in the nearby market or retain it for sale at a later date in the
village itself.
Itinerant Beopari are petty merchants who move from village to village, and
directly purchase the produce from the cultivaters. They transport it to the nearby
primary or secondary market and it there.
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MARKETING FINANCE
1.Production credit:
(i) Short term: - 15 to 18 months
Loans to meet daily working capital requirements of
farmers’ purchase of
Inputs, payment of wages, hike charges of machinery or
tools, electricity charges etc.
(a) Cash component
(b) Kind component: Co-operative marketing societies.
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2. Consumption credit:
It is basically for survival of farm families.
Sources of agricultural credit:
a) Co-operative credit:
i) Primary co—operative credit: Short term
ii) C-operative Land Development Bank: Medium term
Limitations:
i) Limited geographic coverage
ii) Small and marginal farmers
iii) Inconvenience in borrowing
iv) Huge over dues
V) Linked with ownership landholding
b) RBI:
Appointed AIRCSC, recommended:
i) The National Agri. Credit (Long term operations) fund;
ii) The National Agri. Credit (Stabilisation fund)
RBI issues guidelines:
• Margins and security
• Credit norms finance: 30:70 cash: kind
• Recovery or default
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c) SBI:
It provides financial assistance to marketing for processing co-
operatives as well as for co-operative sugar factories, LDB’s,
industrial co-operatives etc.
d) Commercial Banks:
Direct finance is granted for agricultural operations for short and medium
periods.
Indirect finance is granted by providing advances for distribution of fertilizers or
other inputs. These banks also finance for operation of FCI, State Government
and their agencies for procurement.
e) Agricultural Refinance:
Parliament established Devt Corporation: 1963
♦To co-ordinate, guide and assist long-term finance lending institution.
♦Helping in reduction of regional imbalances.
♦Reduction of regional disparities within states.
♦Economic upliftment of weaker section.
f) R.R.B: (Features)
∆ Rural Based
∆ Cater to the needs of backward areas.
∆ Authorised capital structure: Authorised Capital- Rs. 1 Crore, Paid-up
capital- Rs 25 Lakhs, Share Capital Ratio – 50:15:35 i.e. Govt: Own
Deposits: Sponsoring Commercial Bank.
∆ Problems:
Problems in organization (Multi-agency control)
Increasing Losses.
Recovery Problems.
Problems in Management.
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g) NABARD: Apex Body, which looks after the financial needs of agricultural and
rural development.
h) Government Finance:
∆ Takkavi loans to release distress caused by the draughts, floods and the
other natural calamities.
∆ TO assist the farmers to overcome emergencies.
∆ Land Improvement loans Act 1883 – Long-term loans.
∆ Agriculturists’ Loans Act 1884 – Short-term loans.
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A majority of the cultivators tend to sell their produce immediately after the
harvest at the low prices prevailing at that time . About 60% to 80% of the food
grains are still marketed in the first quarter of the harvest season.
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6. Existence of Malpractices:
Such as – deduction of unauthorized market charges, spurious deductions,
unfair weighment, taking away a part of produce as sample by bidders, bungling
of accounts, etc. this results in an increase in real cost of marketing of produce.
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A large no. of farmers have little knowledge of the practice of the grading of the
produce prior to its sale. They usually mix up superior or inferior quality products
to make a single lot. As a result, they get a lower price for their produce.
Sometimes, farmers are penalized by traders for the existence of a small
percentage of poor quality produce in the lot.
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LINES OF IMPROVEMENT
3. Standardization of contracts: -
A series of legislation came into effect to ensure regulation of all marketing
activities. Many of the marketing charges such as darmada, karda, dhalta &
muddat are abolished. Method of sales like hatta system are banned. Recently,
the market charges payable by sellers have been transferred to the buyer.
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b. Complete Shops:
The purchase and sale of commodities is undertaken entirely by the government
or its agencies. Private traders are not allowed to enter the market for purchase
or sale.
In India, complete wholesale trade in wheat was taken over by the
government in 1973; but it had to be given very soon.
State Trading was initially taken up by the food department in the state and
central government. In Jan 1965, the FCI was set up to undertake the purchase,
storage movement, transport, distribution and sale of foodgrains.
Please Note
With Regards,
Mrs. Malini Nagabhushan
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