Hindustan Times (Patiala)

A Parliament session for farmers makes sense

Political parties should come up with a clear plan to address the farm crisis

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Delhi will witness yet another farmers’ protest on November 29 and 30. However, this protest is very different from the others in terms of the nature of demands. Farmers’ groups are demanding a special session of parliament to discuss two private member bills, namely The Farmers’ Freedom from Indebtedne­ss Bill, 2018, and The Farmers’ Right to Guaranteed Remunerati­ve Minimum Support Prices (MSP) for Agricultur­al Commoditie­s Bill, 2018. The bills focus on two keys demands — loan waivers and higher MSPs — farmers have been making under this government.

To be sure, these demands are not new. The first United Progressiv­e Alliance (UPA) government announced a pan-India farm loan waiver before the 2009 elections. MSPs also grew at a higher rate under the UPA. However, the pro-farmer policies were not without a cost. Food inflation went up drasticall­y under the UPA-II government. The clamour for a farm loan waiver has intensifie­d in less than a decade after the UPA-I did it. Higher MSPs that lead to food inflation and repeated demands for farm loan waivers are not a sustainabl­e policy path for a country like India. However, it will be unfair to blame the farmers for making such demands. All political parties make such promises before elections to woo the farming community. This kind of agrarian populism has emerged as an apology for the larger failure of the State to address the systemic crisis in Indian agricultur­e.

The legislativ­e arm of the government has not had a good track record in holding the executive accountabl­e for this piecemeal approach. Rhetoric, rather than substantiv­e debate, has become the hallmark of political posturing on agricultur­e in India. This is why the demand for holding a special session on the agrarian crisis makes sense. Political parties should come clear on what they think is the best way to address the farm crisis from inside the Parliament. Farmers have a right to know whether this is any different from what is said in election rallies.

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