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Heritage Foods Welcomes Budget Focus on Dairy SectorHybrid Dairy–Plant Beverages Gain Traction in Protein TrendBudget 2026-27 Gives Major Boost to Dairy Sector: NDDBBudget 2026 : Livestock Farmer Producers Organisations (LFPOs)New Genomic Testing Boosts Cross-Bred Dairy Herd Performance

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Heritage Foods Welcomes Budget Focus on Dairy Sector
Feb 03, 2026

Heritage Foods Welcomes Budget Focus on Dairy Sector

Heritage Foods Ltd has lauded the Union Budget 2026-27 for its renewed policy support for India’s dairy industry, highlighting initiatives that it believes will strengthen farmer incomes, boost cooper...Read More

Budget 2026-27 Gives Major Boost to Dairy Sector: NDDB
Feb 03, 2026

Budget 2026-27 Gives Major Boost to Dairy Sector: NDDB

The Union Budget 2026–27 has delivered a significant policy and financial impetus to India’s dairy and animal husbandry sectors, marking a strategic push to strengthen rural livelihoods, cooper...Read More

Budget 2026 : Livestock Farmer Producers Organisations (LFPOs)
Feb 03, 2026

Budget 2026 : Livestock Farmer Producers Organisations (LFPOs)

The Union Budget 2026 has accorded significant priority to the Animal Husbandry and Dairying sector, reaffirming the Government’s commitment to strengthening rural livelihoods, enhancing farmers’ inco...Read More

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Budget 2026: Highest Allocation Ever, Yet Dairy Farmers Still Wait
Feb 02, 2026

Budget 2026: Highest Allocation Ever, Yet Dairy Farmers Still Wait

As Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman presented the Union Budget 2026–27 in Parliament on 1 February 2026, the government reiterated its commitment to agriculture and allied sectors — including anima...Read More

How a fridge could unlock modern dairy cattle breeding
Jan 31, 2026

How a fridge could unlock modern dairy cattle breeding

A Hiroshima University-led project has secured a $1.8 million grant from the Gates Foundation to develop a way to store bull semen using simple refrigeration instead of costly liquid nitrogen, a shi...Read More

Economic Survey 2026: Why Dairy Holds the Key to Farm Incomes
Jan 31, 2026

Economic Survey 2026: Why Dairy Holds the Key to Farm Incomes

The Economic Survey 2025–26 quietly but clearly reinforces a reality that those working closely with rural India already know: dairy is no longer just a subsidiary activity to agriculture, it is the b...Read More

Two Stocks Powering India's Rs 1-Lakh-Crore Protein Boom
Jan 21, 2026

Two Stocks Powering India's Rs 1-Lakh-Crore Protein Boom

Protein consumption in India is moving beyond supplements and fitness products into daily food choices. Awareness around nutrition has increased, but intake remains uneven. Parag Milk Foods Ltd. estim...Read More

Global Dairy News

Hybrid Dairy–Plant Beverages Gain Traction in Protein Trend
Feb 03, 2026

Hybrid Dairy–Plant Beverages Gain Traction in Protein Trend

A new trend in the global beverage market blends dairy milk with plant-based proteins, creating “hybrid” drinks that aim to deliver the **nutritional advantages of dairy with the sustainability...Read More

New Genomic Testing Boosts Cross-Bred Dairy Herd Performance
Feb 03, 2026

New Genomic Testing Boosts Cross-Bred Dairy Herd Performance

A major development in dairy genetics has emerged with the introduction of genomic testing for cross-bred dairy cattle, a tool that was previously limited to purebreds but is now accessible for mixed-...Read More

China’s Dairy Pivot: From World’s Top Importer to Emerging Export Challenger
Feb 03, 2026

China’s Dairy Pivot: From World’s Top Importer to Emerging Export Challenger

China — once the largest importer of milk powder in the world — is undergoing a deep structural transformation in its dairy sector, reshaping global dairy trade dynamics and challenging long-standing...Read More

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In Despair’s Wake: When Dairy Dreams Die Under Bank Pressure

By Kuldeep Sharma•Published on June 30, 2025

Prefer on

I’ve just learned of a heart breaking suicide by a dairy entrepreneur in Madurai—not the first, but perhaps the most urgent yet. Today, I call upon the entire dairy fraternity to confront a vital question: in the eyes of the system, what truly is the value of a dairy farmer’s or entrepreneur’s life? These individuals don’t borrow for profit—they borrow to feed families, support farmers, and fuel rural economies. Yet when debt deadlines arrive, they too often face eviction, humiliation—and sometimes death. This could happen to any one of us. Will we remain silent, or rise together and demand change?

The story of J. Rajapandi, a 52‑year‑old dairy businessman from A Malampatti, Madurai, brings this tragedy into stark relief. He borrowed from a bank three years ago and repaid punctually until seven months ago. When he missed EMI payments this June, the bank issued a notice to seal his firm by June 27. Although Rajapandi arranged a ₹35‑lakh demand draft, the bank sealed his unit before acknowledging receipt. Pressed and humiliated, he tragically took his own life at the MGR bus stand. The Madurai police have recorded a case under Section 194 BNSS, and S. A. Ponnusamy, president of the Tamil Nadu Milk Dealers Welfare Association, has condemned the bank’s actions and called for abetment charges against the authorities involved.

Please read it till the end 

This is not an isolated incident. In November 2023, M. R. Albert, 73, president of the Kolakkad Dairy Co‑op in Kannur, Kerala, hanged himself after receiving an eviction notice on a ₹2‑lakh loan. That same month, Parappallil Thomas (“Joy”, 58), a Wayanad dairy society member, ended his life under more than ₹10‑lakh in debt. Across the country, dairy operators such as Munna Yadav in Lucknow, Bhoopathi in Salem, and Siyarām Meena in Rajasthan—all driven by ambition and community spirit—collapsed under the weight of state-backed loans and aggressive recovery tactics. Many others go unreported, buried beneath statistics.

Who are these entrepreneurs?

They are the unemployed graduates, small farmers, and rural youth drawn into the burgeoning startup ecosystem, propelled by initiatives like Startup India and Stand Up India. These programs offered collateral-free loans, credit guarantees, and subsidies—designed to foster self-enterprise in dairy supply chains, co‑operatives, value-added products, and community livelihoods. Unlike urban tech tycoons, they are community-minded visionaries, often supporting dozens of households.

Dairy entrepreneurs borrow not for their personal gain, but to:
  • Provide regular income to smallholder farmers,
  • Build employment in rural/semi-urban India,
  • Support allied industries tied to dairy.
India claims to push for ease of doing business and support entrepreneurship. Yet, outdated policies and loopholes in enforcement allow banks to operate without empathy. When repayments falter, banks frequently resort to coercive measures—sealing assets, issuing public notices, freezing operations—without empathy.In Tamil Nadu’s Salem district, a farmer with a ₹4.8‑lakh loan tragically died after aggressive harassment by bank recovery agents—just days after the state passed a law to prevent such coercion. Tamil Nadu responded, passing the Money Lending Entities (Prevention of Coercive Actions) Bill, 2025, which bans aggressive recovery tactics, prescribes punishments up to five years in prison and ₹5-lakh fines, and introduces abetment charges if a borrower dies by suicide.Karnataka showed strong results when it passed guidelines cautioning banks against property attachment—farmer suicides dropped 70 %. Clearly, policy can matter—but implementation remains inconsistent.

Toward a Compassionate Future

The dairy community must unify around empathy, not debt. Banks and institutions should adopt human-centered recovery practices—offering counseling, restructuring, and support rather than threats. Governments must nationalize protections, penalize coercive recovery as Tamil Nadu has, and double down on accountability through audits and borrower redressal. Holistic support—like mental health counseling, financial planning, and cooperative lending structures—can ensure entrepreneurs don’t fall into despair.

Behind each loan EMI lies a village, a family, and a future. When repayment falters, we must not let ledgers outweigh lives. It’s time for banks, regulators, and communities to shift from enforcement to empathy—with lives and dignity held at the heart of finance.

Only then can India truly honor those who nourish its backbone—and prevent more dairy dreams from dying under bank pressure.

It’s time for the dairy fraternity to stand together against such insensitive treatment by regulators. After all, none of us knows what the future holds—it could happen to any one of us.

Source : Dairynews7x7 June 30th 2025..Blog by Kuldeep Sharma Chief Editor Dairynews7x7

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