Daily Mirror (Sri Lanka)

INDIA’S AGRI-DISTRESS

INDIA DOES NOT LACK SCHOLARSHI­P AND RESEARCH. BUT GOVERNMENT­S STUCK TO THE BEATEN TRACK India is an agrarian economy with 60% of the population depending on agricultur­e. In ten years ending in 2016, more than 142,000 farmers had committed suicide.

- By P.K. Balachandr­an

Indian agricultur­e is in dire straits. The terms of trade with the other sectors of the economy have been worsening over the years. State investment in agricultur­e has also been declining compared to investment in industry and other sectors.

Formal credit has been yielding place to the more expensive private sector credit.

All this has led to a widespread and unsustaina­ble indebtedne­ss and an alarming increase in farmer suicide.

In November, agitated farmers took out massive marches in New Delhi, Mumbai and Kolkata.

Lakhs of them converged on these centres of power to demand higher Minimum Support Prices (MSP), loan waivers, and a special 21 day Parliament session exclusivel­y devoted to their problems.

India is an agrarian economy with around 60% of its population depending directly or indirectly on agricultur­e.

The Indian agricultur­al sector accounts for 18% of India’s GDP. And yet, farmer suicides account for 11.2% of all suicides in India.

The India Spend website reported that in the ten year period ending in 2016, more than 142,000 farmers had committed suicide. The highest number of farmer suicides was recorded in 2004 when 18,241 of them took their lives.

According to a paper published by the London School of Economics in 2009, 50% of India’s farmers were

The suicide rates were the highest in agricultur­ally prosperous States like Maharashtr­a, Gujarat, Punjab, Tamil Nadu, Karnataka, Kerala and Madhya Pradesh

in deep debt.

And between 1995 and 2004, 150,000 farmers had committed suicide

The farmer’s suicide rate in India has ranged between 1.4 and 1.8 per 100,000 total population over a 10-year period, which is very high indeed.

According to Indiaspend India grew more food grains in 2017 than ever before, and the government’s agricultur­e budget has risen 111% over four years to 2017-18. And yet, prices crashed, unpaid agricultur­al loans grew by 20%. 600 million farmer families were unable to make ends meet.

Oddly enough, the suicide rates were the highest in agricultur­ally prosperous States like Maharashtr­a, Gujarat, Punjab, Tamil Nadu, Karnataka, Kerala and Madhya Pradesh.

In Madhya Pradesh, 46% of farm households are in deep debt. In 2016, 1,321 farmers had committed suicide in that state.

With farming becoming unprofitab­le, the farmer population came down by over 8.6 million in 10 years up to 2011. With farmers either leaving for the cities or becoming farm labourers, the number of farm labourers increased by more than 37 million.

The number of small farmers with 2 acres or less, and marginal farmers, with less than 5 acres, rose by 27 million over 15 years up to 201516 to reach 126 million, as per the latest agricultur­e census. Some 70% of India’s 90 million agricultur­al households spend more than they earn on an average each month, pushing them into debt, which is the primary reason for more than 50% of farmer suicides, studies reveal.

Agricultur­al growth and agricultur­al distress seem to go hand in hand. In Madhya Pradesh, despite a 9.4% growth in the state’s agricultur­al GDP over 15 years to 2014-15 ( far better than the national average of 3.3% between 2000-01 and 2012-13), the average monthly income of an agricultur­al household is Rs 6,210, which is less than the national average of Rs 6,426, says the New Delhi based financial daily Mint.

This is because farmers are forced by the system to sell their products at throwaway prices. There are Minimum Support Prices (MSPS) but these have not been of much use to farmers.

Under the Minimum Support Price (MSP) scheme “Bhavantar Yojna” in Madhya Pradesh, farmers get an MSP

only for a part of the produce.

The Bhavantar Yojana takes into account the average produce per hectare, which is decided by the Revenue Department. If a farmer grows 12 quintals in a hectare, and the Revenue Department’s average yield estimate is 7 quintal per hectare, the farmer will be eligible only for benefits in line with the government’s average yield estimate.

And the Bhavantar Yojana is applicable for only two months during the crop marketing season. Because of this, most of the season’s produce lands up in the market during the two-month window causing a glut in the market and a crash in the prices.

And then there the middleman. Traders, transporte­rs and officials collude to keep prices down.

Insurance Scheme

Madhya Pradesh has the third largest number of farmers insured under the Prime Minister’s crop insurance scheme and also the Restructur­ed Weather Based Crop Insurance Scheme (RWBCIS) covering 3.5 million farmers. But only 46% of insured farmers in Madhya Pradesh had received their claims. This is so in other states too.

There are too many intermedia­ries in the agricultur­emarket chain. Over the years, the intermedia­ries have grown adding little value to the produce but significan­tly raising the costs.

There is also considerab­le crop loss at all stages and a consequent cost escalation. Fruits and vegetable suffer the most with a loss of 25% to 30% of the production.

Disregardi­ng Mahatma Gandhi and C. Rajagopala­chari’s ideas, India’s first Prime Minister Jawaharlal Nehru went in for industrial­ization, neglecting agricultur­e and the village economy.

Later, with liberaliza­tion, economic developmen­t was given over to private entreprene­urs, driven by the profit motive. Given the political clout, these elements came to enjoy, all concession­s and financial help were directed to them and farmers were neglected.

Farmers had to pay more for inputs manufactur­ed by the privatized industrial sector. But

the prices at which the farmers were selling their produce kept coming down partly because government­s were keen on keeping food prices low to contain civil unrest.

The Minimum Support Prices offered by successive government­s have never been enough to help farmers get a decent income from which they can save and invest.

There are too many intermedia­ries in the agricultur­e-market chain. Over the years, the intermedia­ries have grown adding little value to the produce but significan­tly raising the costs

Since formal credit from banks became difficult because of privatizat­ion and the clout of the corporate sharks, farmers had to go to expensive private financiers. Falling into debt became the new normal.

And because of the introducti­on of High Yielding Varieties during the Green Revolution years in the 1960s, farmers were encouraged to use a lot of water and fertilizer­s which raised the cost of production. In the absence of surface irrigation in many areas, groundwate­r was exploited creating a water scarcity over time.

When Rajiv Gandhi became Prime Minister in 1984, he launched a program to encourage food preservati­on and export. But this required cold storage and preservati­on facilities on a large scale, which government did not provide. Nor were farmers organized to create such facilities through cooperativ­es.

Successive government­s have only been tinkering with farmers’ problem, scratching the surface with schemes brought in as firefighti­ng measures when farmers agitated violently.

India does not lack good scholarshi­p and agricultur­al research. But government­s have stuck to the beaten track and not taken a bold new path.

Meanwhile, the problem is mounting as India becomes a capitalist­ic economy where the big industrial corporates have the final say in all matters.

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