Millennium Post

AGRI SECTOR NEEDS LONG-TERM ANSWERS, LOAN WAIVERS JUST TEMPORARY: V-P

- OUR CORRESPOND­ENT

MUMBAI: Terming farm loan waiver and free power supply as mere “temporary and populist” steps, Vice-president Venkaiah Naidu Thursday made a pitch for long-term solutions like infrastruc­ture support and cheap credit to improve the agricultur­e sector.

Delivering the Laxmanrao Inamdar Memorial Lecture here, Naidu also called for suitable changes in the laws governing the cooperativ­e sector in view of changed techno-economic and business scenarios to make the cooperativ­e institutio­ns “viable and vibrant”.

The University of Mumbai had organised the lecture to mark the birth centenary late Laxmanrao Inamdar, who was instrument­al in the formation of Sahakar Bharati in 1979.

“There are many challenges in the agricultur­e sector. You cannot have temporary solutions to agricultur­e. Loan waiver, free current ... they are temporary,” he said.

“What is needed is remunerati­ve price, infrastruc­ture support for agricultur­e and cheap credits. Unfortunat­ely for political reasons, we move to populistic, temporary measures,” Naidu said adding that the government­s should rather focus on long-term solutions.

He said since agricultur­e was becoming unviable, people were moving to urban areas from rural parts. “You cannot reverse urbanisati­on, even if you want to ... Even today, 56 per cent people depend on agricultur­e.

“The best method of (improving) agricultur­e according to me is the strengthen­ing of the cooperativ­e movement. This has to be understood by all including the planners, NITI Aayog, political parties, Parliament, people and media,” he said. “The prime minister promised to double farmers’ income by 2022. This is a noble idea, but it is not simple. The government has raised the MSP of most of the crops. Cooperativ­es can help small and marginal farmers in taking the benefits of higher MSPS,” he said.

Terming India’s cooperativ­e movement as the “biggest” in the world, he said it has led to tremendous progress in several sectors of the Indian economy.

“I am told 75 per cent of rural households have been covered through a network of over 8.50 lakh cooperativ­es with a membership of well over 25 crore,” he said. Naidu, however, lamented that in recent years, the cooperativ­e sector has faced structural challenges like dormant membership, lack of active participat­ion of members in the management, politicisa­tion of cooperativ­es and bureaucrat­ic control.

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