Hindustan Times (Patiala)

Dalit farmers need a leg up

Only the State can give them the tools to fight marginalis­ation

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Seven decades after Independen­ce, while a majority of farmers cultivate their own land (however small their holdings may be), most Dalit farmers are daily wagers, according to data released by the Census of India. With the aim of alleviatin­g farmer distress, the Centre included in the Union Budget an increase in the minimum support price for monsoon crops and pledged ₹500 crore to Operation Greens, a programme to help farmers growing tomatoes, onions, and potatoes. Such measures will benefit farmers who own land, not those who don’t.

Data shows that 71% of Scheduled Caste farmers are what the census refers to as agricultur­al labourers — they work for wages on land they do not own. That figure is much lower among other groups: 47% for Scheduled Tribe farmers and 41% for non-SC/ST farmers. Data from the 70th round of Land and Livestock Holdings Survey of the NSSO indicates that 58.4% of rural Dalit households are landless — a much higher proportion than households in any other social group. Landlessne­ss is severe among Dalits in states with a history of feudalism such as Haryana, Punjab and Bihar, where more than 85% of Dalit households do not own land other than the plot they live on. Apart from sporadic efforts, most notably in the Gandhian Bhoodan movement pioneered by Vinoba Bhave in Telangana in the 1950s and by Left government­s in West Bengal and Kerala, and to some extent the National Conference government in Jammu and Kashmir, radical measures such as land distributi­on have not been taken.

Of late, a newer generation of politician­s has again voiced the demand for giving five acres of land to landless Dalits as a means to resolve the crisis of rural livelihood­s. It is not in agricultur­al alone that they have been short-changed. They are under-represente­d when it comes to jobs in the private sector and education. The State’s role in fighting this inequality is crucial. But with land holdings becoming even more fragmented it remains to be seen whether loan waivers, employment guarantee schemes and food security initiative­s bring relief to small, marginalis­ed farmers fighting landlessne­ss, discrimina­tion and poverty.

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