Hindustan Times (Chandigarh)

The farm crisis is really a jobs crisis

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they own, and now need to look for jobs. This proves that half the problem in farms has to do with excess hands who need to find incomes outside the farm.

But this is what has stalled in a world where manufactur­ing and agro-industry jobs are increasing­ly being mechanised, and labour laws militate against hiring more people. This is what needs fixing.

The road to farm rejuvenati­on involves increasing farm sizes (currently 85% of India’s farmers are categorise­d as small or marginal) by allowing surplus labour to find other jobs, so that those who remain farmers can borrow and invest in raising productivi­ty by adopting modern technology and mechanisat­ion. The money now going down the loan waiver drain needs to be re-routed to investment­s in farm infrastruc­ture — irrigation, canals, cold chains, etc. And yes, India needs to become one market for farm produce, by encouragin­g states to bring down the barriers to interstate movements.

Last, the Land Acquisitio­n Act needs to be scrapped, and the focus shifted to creating a genuine market for land in rural areas. Most farmland near cities or highways now costs at least ₹50 lakh an acre. Which marginal farmer will not sell his land at true market prices if he can earn an annuity income of ₹30,000 a month without having to do any work?

The best way to serve farmers is to allow millions of them to exit farming, by allowing them to reap market prices for the one real asset they own: Their land. The UPA’s land Act militates against easy encashment of this asset by making land prohibitiv­ely expensive for infrastruc­ture-building or expanding urban growth.

 ?? PTI ?? Protesters throw milk on the road outside the collector's office, Thane, Mumbai
PTI Protesters throw milk on the road outside the collector's office, Thane, Mumbai

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