North Maharashtra University, Jalgaon Department of Management Studies
North Maharashtra University, Jalgaon Department of Management Studies
North Maharashtra University, Jalgaon Department of Management Studies
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GENERAL INDEX
Abstract
Introduction
Objectives
• Vertical coordination
• Mechanism for Vertical Coordination
• Creating Rural Markets for Vertical Integration
Some other strategies by different Researchers
Conclusion
References
Abstract
Rural Markets are defined as those segments of overall market of any economy,
which are distinct from the other types of markets like stock market, commodity markets or
Labour economics. Rural Markets constitute an important segment of overall economy, for
example, in the USA, out of about 3000 counties, around 2000 counties are rural, that is, non-
urbanized, with population of 55 million. Typically, a rural market will represent a
community in a rural area with a population of 2500 to 30000.
Rural products of India are unique, innovative and have good utility and values. Large
number of rural products sustains a significant segment of the population in the rural areas.
Some rural products can be identified as a demand in the market.
Rural markets, as part of any economy, have untapped potential. There are several
difficulties confronting the effort to fully explore rural markets. The concept of rural markets
in India, as also in several other countries and is still in evolving shape, and the sector poses a
variety of challenges, including understanding the dynamics of the rural markets and
strategies to supply and satisfy the rural consumers.
Now, a day’s every marketer try to capture rural areas. As the Rural population is
nearly three times the urban, so that Rural consumers have become the prime target market
for consumer durable and non-durable products, food, construction, electrical, electronics,
automobiles, banks, insurance companies and other sectors besides hundred per cent of agri-
input products such as seeds, fertilizers, pesticides and farm machinery.
So, our paper aims at the objectives such as availability of resources in rural areas,
create opportunity of employancy by some strategies of marketing, developing the food chain
of vertical coordination & role of ICT in developing rural markets.
Introduction:
In the starting we have to use Mahatma Gandhi quote as-
"India lives in its villages" - Mahatma Gandhi.
From the social, economic and political perspectives the statement is valid even
today. Around 65% of the State's population is living in rural areas. People in rural areas
should have the same quality of life as is enjoyed by people living in sub urban and urban
areas. Further there are cascading effects of poverty, unemployment, poor and inadequate
infrastructure in rural areas on urban centers causing slums and consequential social and
economic tensions manifesting in economic deprivation and urban poverty. Hence Rural
Development which is concerned with economic growth and social justice, improvement in
the living standard of the rural people by providing adequate and quality social services and
minimum basic needs becomes essential. Rural Development is as -“A strategy designed to
improve the economic and social life of a specific group of people”- the rural poor. Hence,
rural development could be improved by rural marketing strategies.
Rural products of India are unique, innovative and have good utility and values. Large
number of rural products sustains a significant segment of the population in the rural areas.
Some rural products can be identified as a demand in the market.
In recent years, rural markets have acquired growth of the economy has resulted into
substantial increase in the purchasing power of the rural communities the rural areas are
consuming a large quantity of industrial and urban manufactured products. Rural marketing
involves delivering manufactured or processed inputs or services to rural producers or
consumers.
Also rural market is getting an importance because of the saturation of the urban
market. As due to the competition in the urban market, the market is more saturated as most
of the capacities of the purchasers have been targeted by the marketers. So the marketers are
looking for extending their product categories to an unexplored market i.e. the rural market.
Objectives:
1) Availability of resources in rural areas.
2) Create opportunity of employancy by some strategies of marketing.
3) Developing the food chain of vertical coordination.
4) Propose the solutions on the present rural marketing strategies.
Rural markets and rural marketing involve a number of strategies, which include:
• Client and location specific promotion
• Joint or cooperative promotion..
• Bundling of inputs
• Management of demand
• Developmental marketing
• Unique selling proposition (USP)
• Extension services
• Business ethics
• Partnership for sustainability
Client and Location specific promotion involves a strategy designed to be suitable to the
location and the client.
Joint or co-operative promotion strategy involves participation between the marketing
agencies and the client.
'Bundling of inputs' denote a marketing strategy, in which several related items are sold to
the target client, including arrangements of credit, after-sale service, and so on.
Management of demand involve continuous market research of buyer’s needs and problems
at various levels so that continuous improvements and innovations can be undertaken for a
sustainable market performance.
Developmental marketing refer to taking up marketing programmes keeping the
development objective in mind and using various managerial and other inputs of marketing to
achieve these objectives.
Media, both traditional as well as the modern media, is used as a marketing strategy.
Unique Selling Propositions (USP) involves presenting a theme with the product to attract
the client to buy that particular product. For examples, some of famous Indian Farm
equipment manufacturers have coined catchy themes, which they display along with the
products, to attract the target client that is the farmers. English version of some of such
themes would read like:
• The heartbeats of rural India
• With new technique for a life time of company
• For the sake of progress and prosperity
Extension Services denote, in short, a system of attending to the missing links and providing
the required know-how.
Ethics in Business as usual, an important plank for rural markets and rural marketing.
Partnership for sustainability involves laying and building a foundation for continuous and
long lasting relationship.
Present position
Rural markets, as part of any economy, have untapped potential. There are several difficulties
confronting the effort to fully explore rural markets. The concept of rural markets in India, as
also in several other countries, like China[3], is still in evolving shape, and the sector poses a
variety of challenges, including understanding the dynamics of the rural markets and
strategies to supply and satisfy the rural consumers
Primary processed foods involve basic cleaning, grading and packaging. Secondary
processing means modification of the basic product to a stage just before the final
preparation. Tertiary processing leads to high value-added ready-to-eat products like bakery
products, instant foods, etc.
Therefore, rural food chain could be one of the constraint to increase the value of
rural marketing as well as it increase the Rural Market Scenario. Also, Indian food market is
extremely fragmented, having large number of players both on the buyers and sellers side.
Presences of large number of players do not necessarily mean high level of competition and
efficiency as their size prohibits them to make necessary investment in production and
procurement of the food materials. Presently there are too many competitors in the Indian
food chain merely increased the cost of agricultural produce without adding any value to it.
So, by giving vertical co-ordination we can increase the quality, service of the food
chain in rural market. By doing this we can attract so many other industrialists to open there
businesses in rural market area which will help to increase the employancee in rural area &
also it will boost rural market economy.
Vertical coordination:
Vertical coordination means the synchronization of successive stages of production
and marketing regarding quantity, quality, and timing of product flows. Methods of vertical
coordination include open production (spot market), contract production, and vertical
integration. In open production, a firm does not commit to selling its output before
completing production. Spot prices coordinate sell of goods across the different stages of
production. Contract production is the production of goods for future delivery. Before
completing production, a producer commits to deliver a particular good to a particular buyer.
Contract production involves more interaction between buyers and sellers than open
production. Production contracts vary in control allocated and risk transferred across stages.
In market-specific production contracts, the contractor and producer may negotiate delivery
schedule, pricing method, and product characteristics. The contractor usually provides a
market for the goods but engages in few of the producer’s decisions. In resource-providing
contracts, the contractor provides a market for the goods, engages in many of the producer’s
decisions, and retains ownership of important production inputs. While this classification
scheme is not unique, it provides a general framework for contract terminology. In Vertical
integration, a single firm controls two or more successive stages of vertical coordination. In
vertically integrated firms, management decision dictates the transfer of resources across
stages. Movement along the continuum of vertical coordination from open-market production
to vertical integration represents the degree to which control of production has shifted to the
contractor or integrator as more functions are transferred from the producer. While market-
specific production Food Processing Five Sectors Project India Development Foundation
contracts, often referred to as marketing contracts, provide contractors with more control than
open market coordination, the control transferred across stages is usually minimal.
Mechanism for Vertical Coordination:
In the rural market also there are number of buyers & sellers who constitute the
essential part any market. So, the price & demand are the factor of the economy plays an
important role in market.
In reality, however, firms are concerns about their ability to buy and sell the quantities
they want at given prices. Buyers and sellers may not know the exact specifications of goods
that they demand or supply. Buyers face costs associated with searching for adequate
suppliers offering the most favourable prices, and sellers face costs associated with
communicating the availability of products with specific attributes. Transaction cost
economics analysis suggests that the main purpose and effect of contracts and vertical
integration is to reduce transaction costs. Transaction costs associated with spot-market
coordination include buyer costs of searching for suppliers offering preferred quality features
at favourable prices and seller costs of determining prices and buyer preferences. Buyers and
sellers can reduce some of these costs by entering into a contract arrangement before
production is completed, but they can still encounter other types of costs. Ex ante (prior to
reaching an agreement) contracting costs are costs associated with drafting, negotiating, and
safeguarding agreements. Ex post (following an agreement) costs are costs associated with
enforcing agreements and may require measuring damages or injury to a contract party,
enacting penalties, and compensating an injured party. Vertical integration may reduce costs
of contracting and spot-market trading but may also introduce new types of transaction costs,
including costs related to communicating information within a firm. Firms choose a method
of vertical coordination based on a comparison of the net effect on transaction costs.
Especially in India, vertical integration in agriculture is difficult to achieve because of the
land ceiling acts which prohibit corporate acquisition of cultivable land.
Creating Rural Markets for Vertical Integration:
An efficient marketing system can provide better prices to producers and improve the
availability of competitively priced quality produce to consumers. However, before
considering whether to carry out improvements to markets and what type of improvements to
introduce, it is important to be sure that markets, or lack of them, represent the main problem.
Other causes of inefficient marketing could be poor roads, lack of knowledge about
marketing among farmers, an inadequate quantity of products to attract sufficient traders.
Formal markets in rural areas play an important role in improving agricultural marketing.
With increase retail competition by providing a convenient place where farmers can meet
with consumers, reduce post-harvest losses by providing protection for produce from direct
sunlight, rain, etc. Traders who buy produce from farmers for transport to urban markets
experience significant costs in travelling from farmer to farmer to buy small quantities. This
is not a major problem if farmers are situated close to major roads and traders simply drive
along the road buying from each farmer. When farmers are at the end of poor quality local
roads, however, traders lose considerable time and money in reaching them. Farmers are also
at a disadvantage because they are more or less Food Processing Five Sectors Project India
Development Foundation forced to accept the price the trader offers. They cannot compare
the price they are offered with the prevailing local price because there is no local market.
Even if they have access to information about the prices in urban markets they cannot really
use that knowledge to negotiate with traders because they have no realistic idea of the costs
faced by the traders in travelling to their farm or village. Markets, on the other hand, provide
a location where all buyers and sellers can meet. Consumers can see the range and prices of
produce on offer and make choices based on their preferences and income. Sellers can take
their produce to one location rather than having to go from door to door. They can see how
much of a particular product is on offer, compare the quality of their produce with that of
other sellers, and set their prices accordingly. In order to achieve such benefits, however,
markets must be situated in locations acceptable to both sellers and buyers. Existing market
sites, or places where buyers and sellers meet informally (e.g. a plot of land at the side of the
road), is usually the best places to construct new markets because they are clearly at locations
favoured by the users. Unimproved markets usually lack any form of shelter. Produce is
displayed and stored in the sun. Fruits and vegetables, for example, can be kept fresh by
protecting it from the sun and by keeping it moist. This is not possible in markets that do not
have either shelter or fresh water supplies. As a first step towards identifying requirements
for new or improved rural markets it is important to understand how prevalent marketing
functions.
Let us discuss some of the methods practiced in India.
a) Farm-gate purchases: Purchase of produce may be on an individual basis at the farm
gate. Buyers go to the farm, usually at a pre-arranged time. In some cases, such as with fruit
crops, the produce can be sold “on the tree” or “in the field” and the buyer arranges for its
harvesting. In other cases the sales may be through marketing groups or cooperatives. The
farmers in this case may wait for the trader at collection centre. Drawback of farm get
purchase is producers cannot compare price of similar output. Advantage is it cuts back in the
number of intermediaries which results in decrease in producer consumer price spread.
Because of poor surface transport facility this method is mainly happen in places near town
only. But this channel is most appropriate for fruits where checking quality is costly. Buyers
and sellers can develop long term relationship. Producers can build up reputation for
producing quality output and can charge a premium for it. Agriculture often suffers from
varietals constraints. Oranges in Nagpur and Mangoes in Malihabad (UP) are instances where
though there are ample productions during harvest time, processing has not taken off due to
unreliability of process able varieties. Fostering relationships between processors & farmers
will lead to productivity increase and improvement of quality and variety.
b) Local markets: These markets are usually for direct sales of small quantities of produce
by farmers to village traders and rural consumers. Rural primary markets often form part of a
network arranged on a periodic basis, such as on a specific day of each week. They are
commonly organized at a central place in a village or district centre or beside a village’s
access road. In some instances, markets in small towns also provide an assembly function.
This form of market is most prevalent in India. Commission agents collect output from this
village level market and sell to district level, who sells to large traders and wholesalers. This
often led to high cost of procurement. Quality of the output cannot be guaranteed as outputs
of various qualities are consolidated. Commission agents do not have and lack incentive of
grading and sorting agricultural produce. This has a serious adverse effect in the food
processing industry because grading output at the later stage of food chain is costly. It leads
to high price and unreliable quality of the processed food. This leads to the vicious cycle of
low demand, low capacity utilization, high per unit cost and low demand.
c) Assembly markets: Larger rural markets are found where greater quantities of produce
are traded, either by the producers themselves or by traders. These “assembly” markets
(gathering produce in larger quantities for onward sale to outside buyers) are often combined
with local rural markets and are normally situated on main highways, other local main roads
or near to ferries. Traders or collection agents working on behalf of urban wholesalers
normally purchase produce. The market operations may be year-round or seasonal,
depending on the types of crops being marketed.
d) Direct sales to urban markets: Farmers may also take their produce directly to urban
areas, either to a retail market or to a wholesale market. Lack of surface transport
infrastructure and as most of the Indian farmers are small and marginal this method has
limited relevance in the context of India. For developing a market it is important estimating
the levels of supply that could pass through new or improved markets. For existing markets
the assessment can be based mainly on observing what is happening in the market. Where
there is no existing market the assessment must be based on local supply and demand
estimates and forecasts. Supplies to a market and the type of market used vary depending on
the type of local agriculture. For example, in areas where there is large-scale production of
fruits and vegetables for urban areas, a new or improved assembly market may be required.
In areas where production is primarily of export commodities, which usually have well-
established independent marketing channels, only rural retail markets may be required.
Conclusion:
One of India’s major achievements has been self-sufficiency in food production.
However, rural sector which employs 57% of the work force is suffering from low growth
rate for decades. If India wants to attain double digit growth rate it cannot be achieved
without growth in agricultural and allied industry. Food processing industry has the potential
of turning this sector into fast track of development. India’s middle class segment will hold
the key to success or failure of the processed food market in India. With higher level of
income and increasing proportion of female work force participation will create demand for
prepared foods. This is conducive to an expansion in demand for ready-to-eat Indian-style
foods. Retail outlets can create a market for processed food in India. Though India has well
over 5 million retail outlets but the retailing industry is in primitive stage in the modern sense
of the term.
The first challenge facing the organized retail industry in India is the competition
from the unorganized sector. Traditional retailing has established in India for some centuries.
It is a low cost structure, mostly owner-operated, has negligible real estate and labour costs
and little or no taxes to pay. They do not have the capability of investing in storage, creating
network of procurement. Consolidations in retail chain are thus necessary to extract the gain
from both size and scope and making necessary investment in storage and procurement.
Creation of rural markets is a must to achieve this objective.
References: