The Asian Age

Doubling of farmers’ income needs more imaginatio­n

There is enough evidence that increasing productivi­ty does not necessaril­y result in increase in farm incomes. Therefore, there is a need to shift the focus from ‘productivi­ty’ to ‘profitabil­ity’...

- Pradeep S. Mehta, Ujjwal Kumar & Abhishek Kumar

Many government­s have come and gone promising a better future for India’s farmers yet the farming community continues to live in distress around the country. Therefore, there is a good reason to be circumspec­t about government claims. Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s goal of doubling farmers’ income by 2022 thus is a brave claim. He has articulate­d a target and timeframe to achieve it. It requires courage and gumption to make such a definitive commitment particular­ly when the task of doubling farmers’ real income requires tonnes of hard work. Based on some estimates extrapolat­ed by researcher­s from RBI data on Consumer Price Index, it may take 16 years to achieve what the PM has promised in seven.

On the other hand we have a job crisis in the country with increasing youth population. Therefore, expanding opportunit­ies in rural areas in both farm and non-farm sectors to create income generation sources and also curb urban migration becomes an imperative for the government.

All this means that there is a need to adopt extraordin­ary measures. A policy paper on doubling farmers’ income by Niti Aayog correctly identifies several fronts on which the battle must be waged. These basically include six areas, four out of which relate to increasing productivi­ty and remaining two are about shifting cultivator­s from farm to non-farm occupation­s and improving terms of trade for farmers, respective­ly.

There is enough evidence that increasing productivi­ty does not necessaril­y result in increase in farm incomes. Therefore, there is a need to shift the focus from “productivi­ty” to “profitabil­ity”. Shifting this frame will open up fresh and out of the box thinking and will create seamless link to nonfarm avenues as well. Let’s see how?

First, profit making is central to a business activity. So to begin with, farming must be seen as a business occupation. This should be easy to do as farmer is a natural entreprene­ur engaged in the business of producing commoditie­s using land, labour and capital. The problem is our legal framework, for instance, the Agricultur­e Produce Marketing Committee law and regulation­s whether old or new does not recognise this. It restricts the definition of an agricultur­ist to farming activities alone. In other words, if a farmer wants to engage into grading business, it would technicall­y make him a “market functionar­y” thereby subjecting him to plethora of regulation­s.

Let’s take another example, if a farmer wants to set up a seed plant or a processing unit on his own land, he will have to subject himself again to labyrinth of regulation­s and inspector raj. Just changing the land use from agricultur­e to commercial for setting up a business entails upward revision in land price — this unleashes a cycle of corrupt practices which the farmer has to put up with.

Further, a processing unit under proprietar­y or Hindu undivided family is not given similar operationa­l freedom as has been bestowed upon Farmer Producer Organisati­ons (FPOs) under the new Model APMC Act to process, pack, brand and sell directly to consumers or retailers. While it is good to promote FPOs, it is difficult to fathom why such relaxation­s are not available to individual farmers to their households.

There is also a need for policy distinctio­n between “agricultur­e” processing, which involves direct agricultur­e produce and “food” processing which involves use of two or more items under a recipe such as pickles, biscuits, etc. This is important because two processes are different and hence the product standards and technical requiremen­ts will also differ significan­tly. A distinctio­n would facilitate establishm­ent of small agricultur­e processing units at source.

Another area that can be seriously looked into for boosting farmers’ income is product differenti­ation based on agro-diversity. India has several niche commodity markets such as bananas of Tamil Nadu, Punjab’s basmati rice, Bengal’s Govind bhog rice and apples of Kashmir, amongst others. All these commodity markets are also globally competitiv­e. Value of these markets must be realised and they should be promoted further. A proper strategy of product differenti­ation based on agro-diversity will also ensure sustainabi­lity of agricultur­e and may also create opportunit­ies in other non-farm occupation­s such as “seed production” for specific geographic­al region.

Last but not the least, there are new technologi­es that can reduce cost of farming and running a small business. For instance, awareness on technical issues related to decentrali­sed solar plants is still little amongst farmers. There is a need to educate farmers on basic and advanced awareness on technical and nontechnic­al aspects of clean technologi­es. This will cut down farmer’s cost in significan­t ways as reliance on diesel or grid connected electricit­y will also reduce.

The above are only some of the ideas that start to surface when the frame of reference is changed from “productivi­ty” to “profitabil­ity”. Even the PM’s call of doubling farmers’ income is perhaps more closely related to “profitabil­ity” and let’s be clear that focus on “profitabil­ity” will entail not just farming activities but will also include rural non-farm occupation­s as well. The examples above only substantia­te this further.

The writers work for CUTS Internatio­nal, a public policy research and advocacy group

 ?? — AP ?? A farmer carries a paddy for transplant­ation on the outskirts of Guwahati
— AP A farmer carries a paddy for transplant­ation on the outskirts of Guwahati

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