MSP is not the sole contentious point. One has to understand that the farmer has a market at his doorstep, which is the Food Corporation of India (FCI). When there is surplus production of foodgrain, the FCI has been picking up 100 per cent or whatever the farmer offers from states like Punjab and Haryana. Now the farmers are worried that with the private mandis, the FCI will not pick up fully what the farmers offer. The farmer will have no choice but to go to a private mandi, where the buyer is not bound by MSP. So he will have to sell his produce at cheap rates. The farmer feels he cannot take the marketing risk. A small-time farmer doesn’t have the wherewithal to market his produce. The farmer may be semi-literate, but he has common sense. He understands where these bills are leading to.