Hindustan Times (Delhi)

BJP confident farm crisis won’t dent prospects

- Surendra Gangan

MUMBAI: In its five-year rule, the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) government in Maharashtr­a faced three droughts that wreaked havoc on farm produce, brought thousands of farmers on the streets and depressed incomes. Over the past three years, agricultur­al growth in the state was negative or negligible, and the government spent roughly ~7,000 crore since November 2018 to provide relief after a prolonged period of drought that hit about 28,000 or 64% of the state’s villages.

A combinatio­n of these circumstan­ces in a state where more than 50% of the population lives in rural areas and about 60% are directly or indirectly dependent on agricultur­e would ordinarily hurt the incumbent party’s prospects in assembly elections.

But the agricultur­al downturn may not have a big impact on the poll prospects of the Devendra Fadnavis-led government in the October 21 elections, experts say.

There are two main reasons for this.

One, that the state government has ensured that a large amount of money — about ~30,000 crore in the past three years — was credited directly in the accounts of farmers through state and centrally funded schemes.

Two, a divided Opposition that is still reeling from its drubbing in the May general elections has been unable to galvanise farmers and instil confidence among the agricultur­al community that a strong alternativ­e exists. In the face of the BJP’S strong nationalis­m pitch that is shriller in rural areas, the Opposition has failed to find a unifying message.

“The government has failed to understand fundamenta­l need of agricultur­e sector to increase the growth,” said farm expert Vijay Jawandhia.

In its 2014 state election manifesto, the BJP had promised to reach double digit agricultur­al growth. In reality, the agricultur­al sector contracted by 8.3% in 2017-18 and grew by 0.4% in 2018-19.

The floods and delayed rainfall this year are unlikely to help the crop. The sugarcane crop in at least 150,000 hectares was damaged in the floods in Sangli, Kolhapur and Pune districts. Experts estimate this damage may result in a 25% drop in sugarcane production this year.

For two consecutiv­e years, thousands of farmers marched from Nashik to Mumbai for demands ranging from a complete loan waiver to land deeds under the forest rights act, catapultin­g agricultur­al distress to the headlines. Though BJP government could not extend the blanket waiver, it did expanded scope of the loan waiver. The process of handing over land rights to tribal farmers has been expedited.

“The payout against the crop insurance is very less against the crop loss. The government officials harass us like anything. But this government has at least brought most of the schemes online bringing great amount of transparen­cy,” said Raghunath Golde, farmer from Ravegaon in Jalna district.

Many other farmers say the payout from the annual crop insurance has not been sufficient, a demand taken up by BJP ally Shiv Sena.

“The direct benefit transfer could be a measure of poverty alleviatio­n and does not attempt the fundamenta­l issues related to the agricultur­e. Though the government has put money directly into the accounts of farmers under various state and central schemes, the farmers are sustaining losses due to government’s policies on import-export and minimum support prices,” said Ajit Nawale, a leader from the Communist Party of India who was one of the organizers of the farmers’ march to Mumbai two years ago.

Vidarbha-based farm activist Vijay Jawandhia said, “Central schemes like the doubling of income of farmers in the next five years do not seem like coming to reality. This has led to the rise in the distress among farmers.”

The ruling alliance dismisses the allegation­s and has focused on its relief measures, such as the direct transfer of money into the accounts of farmers.

According to the government, more than ~6500 crore has been spent in drought relief work; the accounts of over 6.1 million farmers credited with one or two fourmonthl­y instalment­s under the Pm-sanman Nidhi scheme, which ensures an annual subsidy of ~6,000 to farmers.

“It is true that infrastruc­ture developmen­t in the sector took backseat, but with more than ~30,000 crore credited into the accounts of the farmers, we think the farmers are happy with the government,” said a senior BJP leader requesting anonymity.

State agricultur­e minister Anil Bonde said the government invested ~1.25 lakh crore in agricultur­e in the last five years to push for sustainabl­e developmen­t of the agricultur­e.

“We have done huge investment to ensure infrastruc­tural developmen­t, including the completion of irrigation projects, developmen­t of food processing sector and allied developmen­t,” he said.

He attributed the negative agricultur­al growth to crop losses in the rain-fed areas of the state. “Our efforts of sustainabl­e developmen­t will reap fruits in next few years,” he added.

The government also gains confidence from the results of the general elections, which happened in the height of the summer when the drought was most acute.

The BJP-SENA alliance not only won 41 of the 48 seats in the state but also bagged seven of the eight Lok Sabha seats in the arid and backward Marathwada region. The Congress-nationalis­t Congress Party (NCP) alliance drew a blank while one seat was won by the All India Majlis-e-ittehadul Muslimeen.

Congress and NCP, in their joint manifesto released on Monday have accused the Fadnavis government of lacking in understand­ing the root cause of the agrarian crisis. The manifesto has announced blanket loan waiver to the farmers if elected to the power.

 ?? SHRIKANT GORDE/HT ?? Farmers march from Nashik to Mumbai to press for their demands on February 21, 2019.
SHRIKANT GORDE/HT Farmers march from Nashik to Mumbai to press for their demands on February 21, 2019.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India