Economic Affairs, Vol. 66, No. 3, pp. 377-382, September 2021 DOI: 10.46852/0424-2513.3.2021.3 How to cite this article: Pandey, E., Supriya, Mishra, P., Mehta, V., Karakaya, K. and Abotaleb, M. (2021). Growth Rate of Pulses in Eastern Uttar Pradesh a Zone-wise Analysis. Economic Affairs, 66(3): 377-382. Source of Support: None; Conflict of Interest: None Research Paper Growth Rate of Pulses in Eastern Uttar Pradesh a Zone-wise Analysis Ekta Pandey 1 , Supriya 2 , P. Mishra 3* , Vishal Mehta 1 , Kadir Karakaya 4 and Mostafa Abotaleb 5 1 Department of Agricultural Statistics, College of Agriculture, Acharya Narendra Deva University of Agriculture and Technology (ANDUA & T), Kumarganj, Ayodhya, Uttar Pradesh, India 2 Department of Agricultural Economics, College of Agriculture, Acharya Narendra Deva University of Agriculture and Technology (ANDUA & T), Kumarganj, Ayodhya, Uttar Pradesh, India 3 College of Agriculture, Powarkheda, Jawaharlal Nehru Krishi Vishwa Vidyalaya, Madhya Pradesh, India 4 Selçuk University, Faculty of Science, Department of Statistics, Konya, Turkey 5 Department of System Programming, South Ural State University, Chelyabinsk, Russia *Corresponding author: pradeepjnkvv@gmail.com (ORCID ID: 0000-0003-4430-886X) Received: 20-04-2021 Revised: 25-07-2021 Accepted: 05-08-2021 ABSTRACT Atempts are made in this paper to investigate the trend of pulses in Eastern Utar Pradesh, as well as their instability and non-linear model. This time series data on pulses pertains to the period 1980-1981 to 2014-15 and includes information on the area, production, and productivity of pulses. Pulses have had negative growth in terms of area, production, and productivity in all three zones of Eastern Utar Pradesh, namely, the North Eastern plain zone, the Eastern plain zone, and the Vindhyan zone. Since 1980-81, there has been a rise in the area and output of pulses in the Vindhyan zone, as seen by the percentage change. The Eastern plain zone has the most stable pulse crop in terms of instability. Highlights m Zone wise study of growth rates of pulses crops helps in agricultural planning and determining agricultural operation at the state level to meet rising food and nutritional security. Keywords: Growth, trend, linear growth rate (LGR), Instability index, non- linear regression Pulses belong to the Fabaceae or Leguminos as family and are the third largest fowering clusters in the world. Since the dawn of the farming of the principal plants in the globe, people have grown pulses to be domesticated. Pulses are a vital constituent of the super molecule in the diet of an overwhelming majority of the poor and eating in Asia (Devi et al. 2021). In addition to grains, pulses ofer a great blend of eater super high biological value molecules. Asian countries continue to be home to the precious gold of the world’s ill-fed people. Asian countries are the largest producers, businessmen and buyers of pulses, representing twenty ffhs of world production in thirty-ffhs of the world’s space Vishwajith et al. (2014). About 15.2 percent of people in Asian squares are poorly fed. This shows the importance of food and nutrition pulses for Indians (Vani and Mishra, 2019). Pulses are produced mostly in Asian countries, particularly in the Indian subcontinent. Various pulse crops are large measured in the Asiatic country in a wide variety of agro-climatic circumstances therefore it is a major global pulse participant. Pulses do not encompass crops which square measure