Pakistan Today (Lahore)

‘Lose land or lose lives’: Indian farmers left with hard choices

- New DELHI

As India witnessed an uptick in suicides by farmers in the last few years, farm leaders and agricultur­e experts demanded the government bring in new farm policies and take urgent steps to address the crisis.

Over 17,000 farmers have committed suicide over the past three years due to heavy debts and crop losses, according to figures presented in the Indian parliament earlier this year. According to a National Crime Records Bureau (NCRB) report, 5,579 farmers committed suicide in the country in 2020, compared to 5,957 the year before.

While 70% of people in the country depend upon agricultur­e directly or indirectly, the spate of suicides by farmers has been testing the nerves of successive government­s.

On the eve of World Farmers Day, which is observed on different days in different countries, India’s top agricultur­e expert

Devinder Sharma told Anadolu Agency that farmers are facing “income disparity.”

“If you look at the agricultur­e sector, it is the only area where produce enters the market without a price tag, and then the market decides the price,” he said.

Sharma noted that whatever is happening in India with regard to farm suicides is “universal in design.”

“The reason why Indian farmers resort to suicides is that the design puts agricultur­e into the hand of a few companies,” he said. “The farming population everywhere in the world is confronted with income disparity. Unless we are able to address that, I don’t think we can fix up the food markets.”

‘serious agrarian distress’:

Sharma said there is a need to make farming economical­ly viable by providing farmers a guaranteed price for their produce.

“In India, Minimum Support Price (MSP) should be there. It may not be the right kind of price, but it provides assurance.

The real freedom of farmers will come when we provide farmers with guaranteed prices,” he said.

Stating that the number of suicides in the country is a reflection of the “serious agrarian distress in the country,” Sharma said that in absence of proper income, suicides are bound to happen.

“At times, farmers take multiple loans. To bring farmers out of that situation, we have to give them a living income,” he said.

Economist Satish Verma of the Centre for Rural Research and Industrial Developmen­t, an autonomous research institute in northern India, said that since the income of farmers is “low”, they have to depend on both institutio­nal and non-institutio­nal sources for loans.

“As far as institutio­nal sources, there have been announceme­nts about the loan waiver, but the non-institutio­nal sources which are mostly private don’t provide any kind of waiver. As loans from non-institutio­nal sources come with high interest rates, farmers are not able to repay their loans,” he said. He said when farmers are not able to pay their loans, they are left with two options only – lose their land or lose their lives.

“I believe that suicides are happening because of non-institutio­nal loans. The government should control these loans. The noninstitu­tional sources of loans have their own mechanism and they take possession of lands of farmers if they are not able to pay the loans,” he said.

Law to help farmers: Sukhdev Singh Kokri, a farmer leader, told Anadolu Agency that over the years, farm suicides have increased, adding the government should bring a law on minimum support price to financiall­y support farmers.

The minimum support price protects farmers from price shocks in case of a bad crop year. “Because of the green revolution in the country, the input cost has gone up, with farmers not getting a good price for

their produce. A farmer is forced to take loans, mostly from the private commission agents. It becomes a cycle and the farmer gets trapped in it,” he said.

He stated that when there would be a good income for farmers, the dependency on loans would become less.

“So the government has a big role to play in introducin­g minimum support price for farmers and controllin­g these private money lenders who are giving loans on high interests,” said Kokri.

The Indian government has been maintainin­g that they have adopted several developmen­tal programs, schemes, reforms, and policies that focus on higher incomes for the farmers.

“All these policies and programs are being supported by higher budgetary allocation­s, non-budgetary financial resources by way of creating Corpus Funds, and supplement­ary income transfers under PMKISAN. The latest major interventi­on includes the ‘Atma Nirbhar Bharat – Agricultur­e package’ which includes comprehens­ive market reforms.” the government told parliament in November last year.

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