In the winter of 2024, a wheat farmer in Mansa district told a reporter from a Chandigarh daily that he had sold grain to “the government” every rabi season for nineteen years — and had never once heard the word MARKFED. Yet it was MARKFED that issued his payment, MARKFED that ran the mandi procurement centre, and MARKFED that moved approximately ₹25,000 crore worth of grain through Punjab’s cooperative supply chain in a single year. I find this paradox endlessly fascinating: India‘s largest state-level cooperative marketing federation operates at a scale that dwarfs most listed FMCG companies, and yet it occupies almost zero space in public imagination.
This isn’t just a branding failure. It’s a window into how India’s cooperative infrastructure — vast, essential, politically entangled — remains invisible to the very people it serves. And if you care about the future of Indian agriculture, MARKFED’s story demands attention.