Hindustan Times (Patiala)

The farm sector needs a lifeline

Growth fetishism in agricultur­e is fast reaching its limits

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That the farm sector has been mired in economic distress is not an unknown fact in India. Until now, there has been a fundamenta­l asymmetry in who bears the pain of the agrarian crisis. Lakhs of farmers have committed suicide in the last two decades. Farmers’ protests too, have been largely symbolic in nature; such as the

Long March of farmers in Maharashtr­a and prolonged sit-in by Tamil Nadu farmers in New Delhi. These actions have not had any material impact on India’s non-agricultur­al population, especially the middle class which plays an important role in shaping political opinions. This seems to be changing. Over the past few days consumers in many Indian states are paying higher prices and even looking at a potential supply crunch for horticultu­ral products and milk as protesting farmers’ organisati­ons have cut supply lines to wholesale markets. It needs to be kept in mind that farmers, whose economic condition is always precarious, are inflicting economic damage upon themselves by adopting such a tactics.

India’s agricultur­al sector has been on a proverbial wild goose chase in trying to find a solution to its systemic crisis. Our ruling establishm­ent, both the current and previous ones, has only sold promises, reports and occasional palliative­s such as loan waivers to the farmers. Minimum Support Price-based procuremen­t can at best be an anchor of prices for some important food grains. It will take a drastic enhancemen­t in warehousin­g capacity and radical reforms in wholesale markets to provide remunerati­ve prices to farmers. The fact that farmers are protesting despite roll-out of policies promoting digital connectivi­ty and trade in many wholesale markets and crop-insurance programmes, etc shows that little has changed on the ground.

Our politician­s and policy makers have become used to flaunting high agricultur­al growth rate and record crop production figures in their attempts to dismiss concerns about a systemic agrarian crisis. The fact that farmers are dumping the same products is a clear warning that this growth fetishism is reaching its limits as far as agricultur­e is concerned.

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