We need small farmers,
shandies
S. GURUMURTHY
The HinDU BUsieness line 05.04.2013
The
centuries-old
shandies, entirely the show of small, marginal and medium
farmers, are going strong. Yet, the government has little use
for shandies or
small farmers.
Recall two well-known facts
about Indian agriculture. One, the share of agriculture in the
nation’s GDP has
come down from 56 per cent in 1950 to 14 per cent in 2011-12,
but still, lot
more than half of the nation’s working population lives on
agriculture. And
two, more than a quarter million farmers have committed suicide
in the last 15
years. The policymakers are unable to face these two facts.
But
the third fact — less known one — that even by 2051, less
than half of India will live in urban areas [Twenty-first
century India. Oxford University Press] makes a laughing
stock of the
current policies that assume rural India to be a passing phase.
India will then
be a strange nation — an emerging global super power with
majority rural
population.
So,
agriculture will continue to sustain more than half of India
even after four decades from now. These facts are a mere
trailer. A closer look
at the anatomy of the Indian agricultural economy will show how
the
policymaking, budgeting and national economic discourse are
disconnected from
reality.
LABOUR SHORTAGE
It
needs no seer to tell that Indian farming is fundamental for
the food security of 120 crore Indians — projected to rise to
170 crore by
2061. No country in the world has the land or labour to supply
even a fraction
of the food that India will need if it falls short in food
production.
And,
now look at how we are handling this critical segment of
the economy. Discussion Paper No 2 of National Commission for
Agricultural
Costs and Prices [December 2012] says that cost of production of
rice and wheat
has gone up by 45 per cent for three years to 2012-13 — average
of 15 per cent
every year. The reason, says the paper, is the ‘sharply rising
labour and
energy costs’, adding that ‘acute shortage of labour has cropped
up in the last
three years’.
The
paper says that labour costs have gone up 100 per cent in
the last three years and margins of farmers have been declining
for wheat and
rice. This has led to average annual rise in procurement cost by
11 per cent
for paddy and 8.6 per cent for wheat for five years from 2007-08
to 2012-13.
According
to credible studies and reports, the rural employment
guarantee scheme of the UPA government has contributed to labour
shortage and
high labour costs in agriculture, besides also in SMEs and
construction
sectors.
See
how this scheme hits government finances twice over. First,
employment guarantee handout costs the government over Rs 40,000
crore a year
and it creates shortage of agriculture labour and pushes up cost
and, next, that
leads to higher procurement costs, which pushes up food
subsidies.
But
the Ministry of Rural Development [March 2012] gloats over
the labour shortage saying that it will lead to “technology
advances in
agriculture like it happened all over the world”. Just a look at
the Report of
the Working Group on Agriculture to the Planning Commission
[January 2007]
would demonstrate how absurd is such a comparison of Indian
agriculture with
the world’s.
SMALL IS INDISPENSABLE
This
is how the working group report presents Indian
agriculture. Some 60 million small and marginal farming
households [with over
33 crore dependents] cultivate 34 per cent of the land and
produce 49 per cent
of rice and 40 per cent of wheat and over half of fruits and
vegetables. That
is, they cultivate less land but produce more. Their
productivity is 44 per
cent more in rice, 18 per cent more in wheat and 47 per cent
more in fruits and
vegetables.
Their
incremental contribution to national food production
during the period 1971 to 1991 was 68 per cent for rice and 48
per cent for
wheat — the incremental production of the rest, medium-large
farms, being just
32 per cent for rice and 52 per cent for wheat.
Global
studies [Dietrich Vollrath May 4, 2004] confirm that
economies of scale do not operate in farming — small farms being
more efficient
than large ones. The Working Group says, “the small and marginal
farmers are
certainly going to stay for a long time in India — though they
are going to
face a number of challenges. Therefore, what happens to them has
larger
implication for the entire economy and people’s livelihood.” It
is this small
farmer who is hit by labour shortage and high labour costs
caused by employment
guarantee. He cannot go for mechanisation. He can only give up
farming.
Imagine
that all small farmers are replaced by large ones;
theoretically, rice production will instantly fall by 15 per
cent; wheat, by 6
per cent; and fruits and vegetables by over 16 per cent. Where
will the nation
go for food?
QED:
nation needs small farmers. They are no waste — contrary to
the popular view that they are wasting their life on small
farms.
NEVER HEARD OF MSP
More.
The basic facts about agricultural marketing in India will
shock the urbanites. Out of the food production the farm family
keeps 44.5 per
cent for own consumption; sells 13.5 per cent within the
village; and keeps 3.5
per cent in stock — all adding to 61.5 per cent. Therefore only
38.5 per cent
of the production moves outside villages — which is the
marketable surplus. See
how this is marketed.
Some
90 per cent of the marketable surplus [38.5 per cent] is
sold through some 47,000 haats [village
shandies]. A study of 27,000 shandies shows that three-fourths
of them meet
once in a week; one-fifth, twice a week; one-twentieth daily.
Half of them are
held in villages with 5,000 plus population. Two-thirds of them
are situated 16
km from the villages; a quarter of them 5-15 km; and a tenth of
them within 5
km. Only a tenth of the market surplus [38.5 per cent] is
directly taken to
6,359 wholesale markets.
According
to Parliament's 19th Standing Committee Report [April
2007], an NSSO Survey has revealed that some 71 per cent of the
farmers were
unaware of the Minimum Support Price [MSP] which the governments
announce with
great fanfare and 81 per cent of those who have heard of MSP do
not know how to
use it. It is on the basis of these facts the Standing Committee
recommended a
ban on futures trading in foodgrains, as the farmers who are
unaware of MSP
could hardly benefit from the price determination by futures
market.
DISCONNECT COMPLETE
For
decades, government has been trying to wipe out the wasteful
shandies through the wholesale marketing system and MSP
mechanism. But the
centuries old shandies, entirely the show of small, marginal and
medium
farmers, are still going strong.
Why?
Says the Planning Commission working group, the farmers
exchange social information at the shandies and also settle
marriages. Far from
being just markets for goods, they are a social and cultural
institution.
With
the shandies proving their durability, the Planning
Commission working group suggests that the government work with,
rather than
ignore, them. It says that “with requisite technical support
weekly shandies
can also be efficient credit delivery, input marketing,
procurement and other
socio-economic activities”, adding that “by bringing such
services to the rural
and tribal haats,
rather than waiting for the people to come, much more effective
servicing can
be provided”.
It
concludes: “Under the changed economic environment rural and
tribal market can be financially supporting unit and source of
income to
finance further developmental activities”. The nation needs
shandies as much as
it needs small farmers.
Yet,
not a word on shandies and their intimacy with small and
marginal farming brought out by the Planning Commission working
group or in the
Standing Committee report appears in any of the Budget speeches
from 2008-09
presented after the working group report. Instead, the discourse
is about
connecting the farm-gate with the shop-gate through FDI in
retail. The
disconnect between the reality and discourse seems complete.
(The
author is a commentator on political and economic affairs,
and a corporate advisor) (As received from SMD email)
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