To put the text in perspective, let바카라™s recall the thrÂee central farm laws. 바카라˜The Farmers바카라™ Produce TraÂde and Commerce (Promotion and FaciliÂtaÂtion) Act, 2020바카라™, 바카라˜The Farmers바카라™ (Empowerment and ProÂtection) Agreement of Price Assurance, Farm Services Act, 2020바카라™, and 바카라˜The Essential CommÂoÂdÂiÂties (Amendment) Act, 2020바카라™, were aimed at sun-Âsetting the Minimum Support Price (MSP) regÂiÂme through a new arcÂhÂitecture of contract farming, bereft of any crop-Âprice guarantee or clear dispute resolutÂion mechanism. It also laid down a roadmap for hoarding and storage of some essential farm proÂduce by private traders, mainly big corporaÂtes, which they were legally unable to do before. The so-called agrarian reforms by the Centre, predicated on these three enabling laws, were not only an indictment of federal principles as enshrined in the Constitution, but a recipe prepared for both national and global neo-liberal ageÂnda. The laws marked the continuation of the NatÂional Agricultural Policy announced by the BJP-led NDA coalition on July 28, 2000, to induÂstÂrialise and privatise the agrarian sector for expÂort and trade-led growth. The debilitating impÂlications of the policy shiÂft, as perceived by the farmers, were, among others, the removal of price support and subsidies, comÂplete dependence on the vagaries of market forces, absence of government contÂrol and accÂountability, and easier import/export of agricÂuÂltural commodities within the larger fraÂmework of global trading systems in agriculture. In a nutÂsÂhell, farmers saw these laws and policies as an insÂtrument of land grab by corporates.