Public-Private Partnerships in Agricultural Extension: Opportunities and Challenges
Mohit Kumar Pandey *
Centre for Aromatic Plants, Selaqui, Dehradun, Uttarakhand 248011, India.
Muskan Singh
Department of Agricultural Extension Education, Acharya Narendra Dev University of Agriculture and Technology, Kumarganj, Ayodhya, India.
Sulekha
Department of Agricultural Sciences, School of Agricultural Sciences and Engineering, IFTM University, Moradabad-244102 U.P, India.
Pratima Rana
Directorate of Extension Education, Dr. Y S Parmar University of Horticulture and Forestry, Nauni-Solan, Himachal Pradesh, India.
Somdutt Tripathi
Department of Agricultural Extension, Banda University of Agriculture and Technology, Banda, India.
Santosh Kumar Vishwakarma
KVK Lakhimpur Kheri, C S Azad University of Agriculture & Technology, Kanpur, India.
Anjali Pandey
Department of Agricultural Extension Education, SVPUAT, Meerut, India.
Sakshi Shastri
Department of Agricultural Extension Education, College of Agriculture Raipur, I.G.K.V., Chhattisgarh, India.
*Author to whom correspondence should be addressed.
Abstract
Public-private partnerships (PPPs) in agricultural extension have emerged as a critical strategy to modernize knowledge dissemination, improve service efficiency, and strengthen farmer-market linkages amid shrinking public resources and growing demands for precision agriculture. The concept, implementation typologies, global and national experiences, and performance outcomes of PPP models in agricultural extension. ITC’s e-Choupal, Mahindra Samriddhi Centres, and collaborative initiatives under ATMA and Krishi Vigyan Kendra’s illustrate how PPPs can enhance farmer outreach, boost productivity, and deliver context-specific advisories through digital and physical channels. The analysis identifies key indicators for impact assessment, such as yield improvement, cost efficiency, equity in access, and user satisfaction, and methodological tools including randomized controlled trials, participatory evaluations, and ICT-based monitoring systems. Despite documented successes, several challenges persist commercial bias, lack of inclusivity for marginal and smallholder farmers, weak regulatory mechanisms, and sustainability concerns due to short-term funding cycles. The paper highlights future directions for integrating PPPs with climate-smart agriculture, AI-driven platforms, FPO networks, and public-academic innovation consortia to build resilient and scalable extension systems. Strengthening policy frameworks under initiatives like NMAET, standardizing legal contracts, and developing extension-specific curricula are essential to institutionalize PPPs as mainstream extension mechanisms. PPPs, when designed with clear roles, robust accountability, and inclusive frameworks, can play a pivotal role in transforming agricultural extension into a dynamic, responsive, and outcome-oriented system that not only enhances farm-level profitability but also contributes to long-term sustainability and food security. Drawing from diverse experiences and performance data, this paper provides a comprehensive synthesis for researchers, policymakers, and practitioners aiming to design and implement impactful PPPs in agricultural extension services, especially in contexts characterized by pluralistic institutions, digital transitions, and evolving farmer needs.
Keywords: Public-private partnerships, agricultural extension, impact assessment, digital advisory, climate-smart agriculture