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What ails the farm sector?
Forty per cent of
the country’s population remains below the poverty line and forty two
per cent children starve and yet literacy and not food is the
fundamental right here. Also disturbing is the fact that while
population is galloping, food production is stagnant and dependent
largely on the bounty of the nature. This needs to be changed through
better use of technology and management of the resources at hand.
by LALIT SETHI
India
and the world population has tripled since the World War II. The world
and India produces seven times more food than 60 or more years ago when
many nations were in a shambles and farms were marred by mines and other
hazardous chemicals in the aftermath of millions killed by bombs and gun
battles, though not India, which was not a big theatre of war, but of
the war of Independence. Imperial rulers were preoccupied with German
and Japanese invaders and with conquering them. India was the fodder of
the war machine with 2.5 million soldiers to fight on every front to
defeat the Axis power. The war had seen the Bengal Famine with tens of
thousands dying of hunger, but official records called it malnutrition,
not starvation. That was the Imperial nomenclature, valid ever since
until today.
Yet in the bygone 20th century we have
seen great strides, we have seen great visible progress in pursuit of
Mahatma Gandhi’s goal of wiping every tear from every Indian face.
Irrigation dams by the score have been built and dry farms have had
irrigation canals and channels supplying life-giving water. Where canals
could not reach hand pumps or powered pumps have been installed to
irrigate farms. Punjab, Haryana, western U.P. and many other States
prospered, but not all areas. From 30 million tons of grain, India today
produces as much as 210 million tons. For a long time, India was
supposed to be self sufficient, not needing to import any grain, though
for some years now, as part of the policy of food security a buffer
stock has been built and wheat and rice have been imported. Sometimes
exotic basmati rice has been exported and cheaper and large quantities
of cheaper imported to try and feed Indians, but the exercise has not
fully succeeded.
In spite of the great Indian success
story, when India’s economy is one of the fastest growing at a clip of
nine per cent per year why do we in free India, 40 per cent of us remain
below the poverty line, sleep on an empty stomach, why 42 per cent of
all children starve or are very poorly fed? Yet, literacy and education
are fundamental rights, food is not. There are no free lunches, though
midday school feeding programmes are much in place, yet honored more in
the breach than in the observance, because 80 per cent of the money
provided must be and is known to be siphoned off by the time it reaches
the panchayat or the village or the city school into the pockets of all
kinds of people, be they suppliers, petty or senior officials and
politicians, down now to the village panch, leave alone the sarpanch. Is
that the way of the Third World, if not all world, because corruption in
the First Word is far more sophisticated; it runs into millions and
billions of dollars, not in peanuts or a few rupees, hundreds or
thousands of them. Such is the system, like it or not?
Is that why 30 per cent growth some
areas of the services sector and nine per cent overall, farm or grain
production grows only at 2.6 per cent and in years of monsoon failure or
excess of it, the growth is what in modern parlance is sophisticated
jugglery of world negative as nobody wants to speak the truth that
output has gone down or dropped. Management and official jargon has
taken a new leap in falsehood and lies as truth is totally at a discount
and invention and magic with words is the norm. That is Harvard or
management school education, push the dirt under the rug, don’t allow it
to be exposed.
Thanks to multinational producers and
sellers of genetically modified seeds or biotechnology, salesmen push
the hybrid seeds for well irrigated farms to grow more cotton whereas
rain fed farms can take only ordinary seeds, cheaper and ten times
costlier. At the time when farmers in Nagpur or Vidharbha and Andhra
should be reaping a big crop, they find zero shoots. They have borrowed
money to buy this costly seeds. They are deep in debt, of principal and
interest. They have been cheated. Since they cannot afford to pay, the
moneylender knocks at their men with musclemen in tow, throws them out
of their hearth and home and occupies their parched farm. What does the
poor farmer do now? He takes his life, next members of his family start
doing the same. Thousands of farmers have been doing so for some decades
now, although heartless money lenders have been doing this for centuries
gone by. That is the story of Indian village, village after village.
Now that a general election is less
than 15 months away to choose a new Lok Sabha and three States in the
north east are in the process to elect legislatures and six more States
will do so before the end of the year or early next year, the Government
is engaged in double quick time to line up doles for the voters,
especially for the farmers, who are the backbone of a democracy, who
hold the maximum number of cards. The magicians that the Prime Minister,
his Finance Minister, and their boss, the Chairperson of the United
Progressive Alliance are, have ordained that Rs. 32,000 crores of
buoyant government revenues must be dispensed with as debt relief to
farmers to woo them for the grand old party. This is less than ten per
cent of the bank loans of Rs. 3,42,000 crores the farmers owe to the
banks, but it is the government which will reimburse them so that they
can balance their books and prudential banking does not receive a jolt.
But the farmers at the mercy of private money lenders who charge 2 to 3
per cent are unlikely to benefit. Will they continue to die and starve
as before? Only time will tell. God save them, for who else can? |