The Free Press Journal

New farm laws no fix for green revolution blues

FPJ Correspond­ent Avdhesh Mallick speaks to Chhattisga­rh

- A L I CHOUGULE

Last week, Prime Minister Narendra Modi hardened his government’s stand on the farm laws. In the Rajya Sabha, during his reply to the President’s address, the Prime Minister asserted that the farm laws wouldn’t be repealed, although the government was open to negotiatio­ns. Modi made his case for reforms by invoking former Prime Ministers Lal Bahadur Shastri, Chaudhary Charan Singh and Manmohan Singh. In his long speech, lasting for over an hour, of which 25 minutes were devoted to the controvers­ial farm laws, Modi likened the farm reforms to the green revolution of the mid-1960s and 70s, saying that revolution too had been met with resistance and opposition, just as the three farm laws now. The Prime Minister also gave the example of Operation Flood or the White Revolution that had made India the world’s largest milk producer, accounting for 20 per cent of the world’s production.

A day after his speech in the Upper House, his response to the motion of thanks on the President’s address in the Lok Sabha was overtaken by angry protests from the Opposition when he spoke of the farm laws. The Opposition shredded him for over two days for comments like ‘Andolan Jeevis’ (profession­al protesters) and ‘Parjeevis’ (parasites) made in Parliament during his earlier address. What followed were loud protests and a huge altercatio­n, which the Prime Minister said was a ‘planned strategy to drown out reason to hide the truth’. Admitting that change would ‘always raise doubt’, the Prime Minister repeated the same old stuff: “The farm laws will not bring down any farmers. No mandi has been shut nor minimum support prices (MSP) stopped.” But the farmers are not impressed. Disincline­d to accept the Prime Minister’s assurances and promises, they are continuing with their protest, which has become even stronger with larger participat­ion of farmers in mahapancha­yats in many states in solidarity with the farmers at Delhi’s borders.

Invoking the green revolution to justify the new farm laws may not be right, given that there is little comparison between the two, as also between the India of 1960s and the 2020s. The 1960s were the time when India was in the throes of massive food shortages, monsoon failures and agricultur­e crisis. That was also the time when the country depended on America’s PL 480 scheme, a law especially enacted for India, under which the US would send India foodgrain – 3 to 4 million tonnes of wheat – so that Indians wouldn’t starve. That was also the time when Indian planning was obsessed with heavy industry and agricultur­e was seen through land reforms, community developmen­t, cooperativ­ism and motivation. It is true that peasant movements led by the Left parties in the post-Independen­ce era were in favour of land redistribu­tion from the landlord to peasants to tackle the food crisis and therefore, were fiercely opposed to the idea of the green revolution.

But the Congress, obliged to the landlords for electoral support in rural India, was unwilling to implement comprehens­ive land reforms. Thus, a US government-promoted green revolution, comprising subsidised fertiliser­s and modern irrigation, new varieties of rice and wheat, hybrids and plant breeding, was favored by India to boost foodgrain production. But this green revolution – essentiall­y the promotion of capital-intensive industrial agricultur­e – while holding out the promise of provisioni­ng the vast impoverish­ed population with subsidised foodgrain for the government to win over landowning farmers, created its own set of problems. Given the expense, it was rolled out in a few well-endowed states. As bumper grain production­s predictabl­y depress prices, farmers were guaranteed procuremen­t through state-run market yards (mandis) at MSPs declared in advance. Thus state procuremen­t transforme­d Punjab and Haryana into India’s food basket.

However, in the longer term, even the geographic­ally limited package proved fiscally burdensome for the government. As state support began to decline, the problem of remunerati­ve prices and farm debt increased. So did ecological crises – depleting groundwate­r levels, saline and degraded soils, and biodiversi­ty loss and health disorders due to pesticide use – culminatin­g in a full-blown agrarian crisis and an epidemic of farmer suicides. While the green revolution ensured cheap foodgrain and cereals, it also created a broad base of discontent among the vast majority of farmers and agricultur­e labourers, who suffered declines in incomes. The result: massive rural distress.

On the other hand, Operation Flood, commonly referred to as the White Revolution, transforme­d

India from a milk-deficient country to the largest milk producer between 1970s and 1990s. It helped dairy farming become India’s largest self-sustaining industry and also India’s largest rural employment provider. It was a success because the bedrock of the “billion-litre idea” was village milk producers’ cooperativ­es. The cooperativ­es not only procured milk but also provided inputs and services, making modern management and technology available to their members. Operation Flood helped dairy farmers direct their own developmen­t, by empowering them with the controls of the resources that they create. The cardinal principle on which the operation worked was that the entire value chain – from procuremen­t to marketing – should be the sole and exclusive domain of the farmer, with the small, marginal and landless farmers getting greater importance.

The green revolution was focused on making India self-sufficient in food, but today the question is: How to end farm distress and increase farmers’ income. Though the government has been waxing eloquent about ‘empowering farmers’ and the ‘freedom’ they have to negotiate with the traders under the three farm laws, in reality, the laws lay down a litany of procedures and conditions that farmers must fulfill while entering into agreements with large businesses and have been designed without keeping in mind the vastly unequal bargaining powers between the poor farmers and large businesses. Farmers allege that the farm reforms are instrument­s to hand over regulatory control of agricultur­e to traders and large businesses.

Many supporters of the government have described the controvers­ial farm laws as a major step towards a free market in agricultur­e. The government has also contribute­d to this narrative by emphasisin­g that the laws would allow farmers to ‘freely’ negotiate the best deals with large traders and agri-businesses. But the problem with this narrative is that in reality, the farm laws, according to some experts, intrude upon the regulatory powers of state government­s and intensify the already severe power asymmetry between corporate businesses and the mass of Indian farmers, nearly 86 per cent of whom cultivate less than two hectares. Some agricultur­e experts are also of the view that no amount of tinkering at the marketing end will fix a fundamenta­lly warped and unsustaina­ble production model.

The author is an independen­t senior journalist

Why

is the Government bringing a child-friendly budget this time and what are your expectatio­ns?

Children are the future of any family, society or a state and ours is a tribal-dominated developing state. Thus, we must welcome that Bhupesh Baghel Government is going to present a child friendly budget this time. As the school education minister, I think this time the volume of the budget, especially of my department, will be larger than the previous budget. I wanted all the children of Chhattisga­rh will get better, scientific, improved and quality education and to meet these, you need a special budget. As a minister, what new steps do you have taken in the field of school education?

You know there is lesser admission in government schools. People wanted their children to get an education in English. Even government staffs complained as there is no English school available in their area so transfer them to the city for the sake of their children's future. Therefore, the government has initially started 52 government English schools, all supervised by District Collectors. We have planned to increase its number to 100 in near future. Apart from it, we are running Model Schools, Eklavya Vidyalays, free coaching and others for the school students.

What

is the status of implementa­tion of RTE in the state? How are you resolvingt­he parent’s grievances towards fee hike by private educationa­l institutio­ns?

We are doing very well in implementa­tion of the ‘Right To Education Act’ is concerned. Right now more than 2.5 lakh BPL students are reaping benefits of this scheme.

Due

to naxal violence, 300 schools shut down in the insurgency-hit Bastar division?

More than 26 schools were reopened in 2019, and you know then after during the corona pandemic situation worsened. Despite threats and difficulti­es, we are still trying to strengthen school education in the Bastar area and adopted new policy. How have you tackled this coronacris­is? When will schools open?

Covid-19 crisis is a global problem. Despite limitation­s, we focused on innovative ways of education. We developed Padhai Tunhar Dwar (Education at your doorstep), imparted online education to 3.77 lakh children.

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 ??  ?? I wanted all the children of Chhattisga­rh will get better, scientific, improved and quality education
I wanted all the children of Chhattisga­rh will get better, scientific, improved and quality education

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