Thursday, April 30, 2020

Indian Agriculture and the apathy of the educated class

            We are at another inflection point at looking at India's agrarian problems. The subcontinent, even after 7 decades of independence is still agrarian in its economical and social setup. Let us leave out the politics part. Though people tell me that politicians are different in various countries, for me they all appear the same and do the same. That is, they loot and plunder. Though I have had good education from my parents and I have been a netizen since the year 2000, I am not having any solution in sight for the issues plaguing our agrarian setup. If we see the setup before independence we see that the tillers were bonded to their job by devious methods. Land being a property was known to only a few of the elite. This elite owned all the land. The tillers were laborers and would till the land for being compensated with a very puny portion of what grew out of their efforts. The agrarian scene in India has changed from self sufficiency to a heavily commercialized scene with the advent of the British in India.

           Plethora of laws/rules/regulations have happened since that time. The zamindari system is one of the first attempt at consolidation of land but the system was tyrannic. So plenty of laws/rules/regulations were changed across the presence of british in India to reduce this tyranny and to bring the tiller and the government face to face. This was not a goodwill gesture from the british but more of a corrective action since the zamindaris knew how to hoodwink the government with their payment of taxes. All other actions by the british and later the governments of free India was to reduce the oppression of the tiller. They all thought that the best way is to make the tiller the owner. This resulted in a huge numbers of tillers with tiny pieces of land. Now the tillers will grow what they always wanted to grow. But there is no scientific thought to it. It does not consider what other farmers in India are growing.

          There are numerous examples where majority of the farmers have grown the same vegetable/fruit, leading to a price crash and in course leading to many suicides. Many other reasons for suicides being depended on the monsoons for the water aspect. More recent reasons being threats from Micro-financing companies. Micro-financing which was supposed to be the silver bullet for Indian agriculture has proved to be a golden noose. This also led to more commercialization of agriculture. Because now, the tiller is the owner, the agricultural specialist, the marketeer, the economist, the forecast specialist and what not. This led to a new crop of consolidators called the middle men. These people are what keep the circuitry closed between the tillers and the consumers. Once again, the tiller is face to face with another avatar of consolidators.

             Yes, Yes, You know all about it. What are you going to do about it. All feelgood samaritans take up this topic. What will the farmers do? How will the farmers survive the pandemic? Who is thinking about the farmer? I will answer the question. Every damn fellow is thinking about the farmer. The problem is not in thinking. The problem is nobody has any solutions to the problem. The next agrarian revolution has to happen with an IT backbone with data regarding every acre of land being cultivated. What is being cultivated, When is the probable yield and data like these superimposed with issues that might be facing the cultivators and the crop.

           Yes, it is not easy to visualize. But then if you tell me that India is primarily an agrarian economy and agriculture is the largest industry then you definitely have to think big. You cannot solve the issue by forcing companies to open call centres at district levels. Though that would be an added bonus. This would be an impetus and motivation for education. But you are not doing anything to motivate future educated farmers which we would be having in the next generations. Right now all educated farmer's sons are in towns and districts which is at the consuming end of the agrarian spectrum.

           I hate us educated lot of India, who just feel sorry for the plight of our farmers as though they are in a different planet. If we cant do anything let us stop being sorry for the farmers. They dont deserve our sorry and I dont know how many of us deserve their hard cultivate produce. If you are that kind who thinks nobody is doing anything to improve the farmers plight dont have any conversation with me. I know all about that. If you are that kind who wants to tell me that only you are concerned about their plight, I give you the middle finger.

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Nobody can deter me away from "free as in freedom" concept seeded by Sri RMS. See to it that u dont make fun of my belief. If u think otherwise, no need to comment.