The Sunday Guardian

REFORMS ARE NEEDED FOR GROWTH

-

The farmers of India are heroes who have done so much to ensure that starvation has all but disappeare­d from India, a country that has seen famines taking away hundreds of thousands of precious lives, even millions, as recently as in the 1960s. Punjab has been in the vanguard of progress in our country, accounting for a substantia­l part of the surplus foodgrain that goes across the country for keeping hunger away from the needy. Similar is the case with Haryana, again a state that has done immense service in the cause of ending starvation. Several appear to have a difference of opinion about the three farm laws passed recently by Parliament. There are world leaders who believe that it is somehow improper for a government elected democratic­ally to pass laws, and who believe that the way to extinguish a law is to fill the streets with protestors. A better way would be to meet around a table and seek an amicable resolution, but if this proves impossible, it would be a precedent that may return again and again to try and ensure that other laws that have been passed by both Houses of Parliament get withdrawn in such a manner. In a period when reforms are being attempted, almost every move to change the long-establishe­d status quo will be opposed by many. If they are given a veto, hardly any except the most anodyne of reforms can be implemente­d. This would be harmful to the interests of the country and each of its citizens, no matter what state they belong to or what the faith they are born into is. It is a fact that there is a wide band between the price received by the farmer and that paid by the consumer. Those who act as middlemen in such transactio­ns claim that they have costs such as transporta­tion and the giving of loans to farmers. Judging by the evidence, it is obvious that the middleman makes far more out of each transactio­n than the farmer. Hence the aversion to the setting up of a system where he is absent or not needed, and in which the farmer can directly contract the sale of his produce with a buyer. There should be freedom for enterprisi­ng individual­s to set up internet kiosks designed to assist farmers to contact prospectiv­e buyers, so that they get the best price rather than that given by the middleman, which is often less than the minimum support price by a substantia­l amount because of what is claimed to be loan repayment as well as other charges. Every reform needs time to iron out the wrinkles and ensure smooth functionin­g, and the system created by the new laws will not be different. Unless they are put in operation, it is not possible to claim that the new is worse than the old. The reverse may be the case. The best way forward would be for those states who do not wish to implement the laws to be given the freedom to keep the laws in abeyance, while those states willing to go ahead with implementa­tion should be permitted to do so. A blanket ban even temporaril­y or through withdrawal of the laws would not be fair to those states who are willing to go forward with the innovation.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India