試す 金 - 無料
Farmers' stir: Old questions need new answers
The Sunday Guardian
|February 25, 2024
Farmers should stop playing the victim card and adopt progressive cultivation practices, integrated agriculture solutions, crop diversification, ete.

I have been involved in agriculture and crop -protection since 1966, and in academics since 1987, sensitising MBA students about rural India, about its diversity. I have interacted with farmers on their farms across India, especially in the northern belts of cotton, paddy, wheat, and sugarcane. I have dealt with dealers and aartias' and shroffs, and commission agents who dominate the money spends for cash crops, lend at 2% p.a. interest, barter produce, provide inputs, and have for generations been the central Bhagwan (God) of the farming community, for all his concerns, from marriages to machinery, from elections to health. Historically, after partition, feudalism gave way to land reforms; land ceilings; and governments intervened to support farmers with subsidies on electricity, fertilisers, and waivers of loans due to floods and droughts. Wheat, rice and sugarcane came under annual government buying programs, through use of minimum support pricing, initially arbitrarily, later using the Swaminathan Commission proposals.
While Jawaharlal Nehru and later governments gave huge attention to industrialization, institution building, agriculture remained backward, and a victim arena that housed the "annadatas" and the vote banks, with income tax on the segment, and other levies, being exempted. Continued use of old cultivation methods and tillage have shrunk the water table (1 meter annually), and crop diversification initiatives are a far cry. The inheritance laws have fostered the partition of land, and today marginal farmers own on an average 1.08 hectares of cultivable land per capita and a majority less than 0.5 ha. Even with the best inputs and yields, with support pricing, such farmers cannot find profitability in their operations. They lose annually.
They borrow, lose more and borrow more. Aartias and commission agents have a field day. Everything comes out of perpetual indebtedness. For tractors, mechanization, pumps, tillers etc.
このストーリーは、The Sunday Guardian の February 25, 2024 版からのものです。
Magzter GOLD を購読すると、厳選された何千ものプレミアム記事や、9,500 以上の雑誌や新聞にアクセスできます。
すでに購読者ですか? サインイン
The Sunday Guardian からのその他のストーリー

The Sunday Guardian
INSIDE BAHRIA FOUNDATION, PAKISTAN NAVY'S CORPORATE EMPIRE
Pakistan today is a country mired in economic crisis.
5 mins
September 21, 2025
The Sunday Guardian
MAMATA FORGETS INDUSTRIAL PROMISES, FUNDS VOTE-BANK SCHEMES
The Bengal government cancelled 30 years of signed commitments retrospectively.
4 mins
September 21, 2025

The Sunday Guardian
SUPREME COURT IS THE LAST HOPE FOR RESCUING A U.S. IN TURMOIL
The list of evidence that President Trump is living in a world of Alternate Reality is lengthening steadily. Now only the US Supreme Court stands as an effective obstacle to the chaos being created by the White House.
4 mins
September 21, 2025
The Sunday Guardian
Trump's $100,000 H1-B fee to hit Indians the hardest
US President Donald Trump on Saturday (India time) announced a sharp increase in the cost of applying for H1-B visas, raising the fee to $100,000 per petition.
6 mins
September 21, 2025

The Sunday Guardian
‘BULLET TRAIN PROJECT WILL BENEFIT THE MIDDLE CLASS'
Following PM Narendra Modi’s announcement in Japan to run bullet trains across 7,000 km in India, we not only conducted a reality check on the Bullet Train project, the most ambitious project underway, but also spoke with Railway Minister Ashwini Vaishnaw about it.
2 mins
September 21, 2025
The Sunday Guardian
BJP DEPLOYS LEADERS TO DRIVE BIHAR POLL STRATEGY
With the Bihar Assembly elections drawing closer, the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) has stepped up its preparations, unveiling a comprehensive roadmap that ranges from strengthening booth-level presence to overseeing statewide campaign coordination.
1 min
September 21, 2025
The Sunday Guardian
CISF ROLLS OUT LANDMARK REFORMS IN PROMOTIONS, POSTINGS
Cutting delay, 13,520 non-gazetted officers and 406 gazetted officers were promoted this year so far
1 mins
September 21, 2025

The Sunday Guardian
China and the post-American order
Pax Britannica ended not because Britain wanted it to, but because it could no longer afford its empire. Pax Americana is unravelling for the same reason: America cannot command the global economy, the institutions, or the narrative as it once did.
6 mins
September 21, 2025

The Sunday Guardian
China's stealth fighter J-35 is a mirage for Pakistan
It is increasingly unlikely that Pakistan will be able to fly China's J-35 stealth fighter in this decade.
2 mins
September 21, 2025
The Sunday Guardian
GANDHI FAMILY VISIT HEATS UP KERALA POLITICAL SCENARIO
Gandhi family's Wayanad visit stirs politics ahead of assembly elections.
2 mins
September 21, 2025
Listen
Translate
Change font size