Hindustan Times (Lucknow)

Farmers using cash scheme well: Study

Research shows beneficiar­ies invest benefits in modern farm technologi­es, apart from education and health care

- Zia Haq zia.haq@htlive.com ■

NEWDELHI:A study of the impact of PM-KISAN, the Modi government’s income transfer scheme for farmers, has found that poor cultivator­s don’t squander the money they receive, but invest it “efficientl­y” in modern farm technologi­es, apart from education and health.

However, the extent to which farmers were likely to invest the free cash in agricultur­e was influenced by the availabili­ty of farm knowledge sessions imparted by the country’s network of institutio­ns called Krishi Vigyan Kendras (KVK), technicall­y called agricultur­al extension services, the study found.

How farmers utilised money also depended on the very timing of cash release, according to the study, which is part of a larger project of the Indian Council of Agricultur­al Research (ICAR) and the Internatio­nal Food Policy Research Institute (IFPRI).

The study found that beneficiar­ies were diverse and there was no “statistica­l evidence” of any bias in selection of farmers on the basis of caste, community or faith.

Under PM-KISAN, the government provides income support of ~6,000 a year to farmers with a valid enrolment, paid in three equal cash transfers of ~2,000 — one every four months. It was launched on February 24 last year, when the first instalment was paid.

The cash is unconditio­nal, i.e. nearly 80 million recipients are free to spend the money as they want, but it is expected that they utilise some part of the cash on farming.

Farmers tend to invest substantia­lly in agricultur­al technologi­es, such more productive seed varieties, when the cash release happens close to sowing seasons and KVK field officials are available to tutor farmers on latest methods of farming and use of better seeds, the study found.

“So, what are the lessons? The lessons are that it is important to synchronis­e the release of the cash with that of farmer-training activities of Krishi Vigyan Kendras,” said Pramod Kumar Joshi, one of the authors of the study.

The researcher­s studied two instalment­s for spending patterns. In one instalment, the results showed that 52% of those who received the first instalment spent it on agricultur­e and 26% on consumptio­n, 7% on education and health and the remaining 15% on other incidental expenses such as festivals and marriages.

The study showed that PM-KISAN has increased adoption of modern cultivars (crop varieties) for farmers with access to KVKs by 36 percentage points as compared to those who were not covered by KVK’s field scientists.

More than 60% of farmers who received the money in the off-season spent it on consumptio­n, education and medical purposes, suggesting that farmers are most likely to invest larger sums in agricultur­e when the money is released just before the sowing season.

Joshi collaborat­ed with colleagues Deepak Varshney, Devesh Roy, Anjani Kumar at the IFPRI to sample 1,406 farmer households who got money under PM-KISAN and segregated them as those having access to government training in farm technologi­es and those who did not. Their findings were published in the IFPRI journal as well as in the EPW journal.

In the last instalment of PM KISAN, the government paid nearly ~17,000 crore to about 80 million enrolled farmer households in April 2020.

“PM-KISAN shows a potential to break the cycle of intergener­ational poverty and low income of farmers through investment in modern technology,” the authors said in the study.

KR Mani, an economist with the Tamil Nadu Agricultur­al Technology, said: “This study essentiall­y demonstrat­es that it is not enough to give farmers cash, but the government must ramp up the numbers of farmers covered by KVKs, which are present in every district of the country.”

 ?? HT ARCHIVE ?? ■
Women at a Krishi Vigyan Kendra in Punjab.
HT ARCHIVE ■ Women at a Krishi Vigyan Kendra in Punjab.

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