Deccan Chronicle

Indifferen­ce to farmers’ plight is not an option

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Tens of thousands of farmers, from practicall­y every corner of India, marched on the streets of New Delhi on Friday to highlight the very difficult conditions of their lives, and to underscore that the crisis in Indian agricultur­e is for real, but the government wasn’t listening. No official functionar­y came forward to formally take note of the agricultur­ists’ demands or offer assurances in any form, once again underlinin­g that the country’s policy-making elite do not really include agricultur­e in their overall calculus in any dynamic manner, ready to look at structural questions and make the necessary adjustment­s for unfavourab­le events that impact output and incomes.

This makes the 60 per cent of the population that resides in the rural areas a mass to be remembered only at election time, and even then to be appealed to principall­y in the name of caste or religion. Promises regarding livelihood betterment are made during elections but seldom kept.

In 2014, the BJP and its candidate for Prime Minister, Narendra Modi, promised the implementa­tion of the Swaminatha­n Commission recommenda­tions, the principal of which is that prices of agricultur­al commoditie­s should be set 50 per cent higher than the comprehens­ive cost of production.

First the Narendra Modi government told the Supreme Court it was unable to do this. Next it publicly claimed it had met its promise. But farmers complain that even partial announceme­nts made lie unimplemen­ted. In the absence of irrigation and other infrastruc­tural budgetary outlays, the commitment of the Modi government in Parliament and outside to double farm incomes by 2022 is so obviously a “chunavi jumla”, or enticing statement to catch votes, an expression given currency by BJP president Amit Shah.

In the last year and a half, batches of farmers have arrived in the nation’s capital as many as four times to draw the attention of Parliament and the government to the crisis in agricultur­e and to the miserable lives they lead. So serious has become the suicide rate among farmers that the National Crime Records Bureau has, since 2016, stopped issuing suicide statistics for this category.

Given the magnitude of the crisis, the farmers who sought to address Parliament earlier this week have demanded a three-week special session of Parliament to discuss the farm sector threadbare and arrive at key policy recommenda­tions. Whether this is done or not, it is evident that indifferen­ce is no longer an option.

Key Opposition parties, including the Congress, joined the farmers in protest, trying to set the stage for the next Lok Sabha election. But let them make a small beginning from the states they administer.

In the absence of irrigation and other infrastruc­tural budgetary outlays, the commitment of the Modi government in Parliament and outside to double farm incomes by 2022 is obviously a

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