India’s farming predicament

India’s farming predicament
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Highlights

India’s farming predicament. Lean, intense and troubled, pea-and-wheat farmer Ramlal is not supposed to be in crisis. At 35, Ramlal (he uses only one name), is part of India’s farming elite—the 19% that owns more than 1.1 hectare of land — and a rural representative of India’s booming middle class.

Ramlal, of UP’s Rajwada village, could not escape the effects of India’s increasingly uncertain weather, despite being part of India’s farming elite and its middle class. His wheat farm has been devastated, and government compensation does not cover even 13% of his losses

Lean, intense and troubled, pea-and-wheat farmer Ramlal is not supposed to be in crisis. At 35, Ramlal (he uses only one name), is part of India’s farming elite—the 19% that owns more than 1.1 hectare of land — and a rural representative of India’s booming middle class. He owns 21 hectares of land (5 hectares sown with peas), a television, motorcycle and tractor, and lives with his family of eight in a four-room brick house, with a courtyard and store, in a south-western corner of Uttar Pradesh, a state that accounts for a fifth of India’s farming households.

Yet, after unseasonal rains and hailstorms ravaged his winter, or rabi, wheat crop, the economic crisis upon him indicates the tenuous situation of the Indian farmer, poor or relatively prosperous, even when the government provides compensation. “It is as good as nothing,” said Ramlal, of the Rs 36,000 he will get as compensation from the UP government.

Ramlal spent nearly Rs 17,500 per hectare of wheat, so the official compensation of Rs 18,000 per hectare appears to cover his expenses—except that the government allows compensation for a maximum of two hectares. Ramlal lost crops across 16 hectares of land.

If this was a normal year, Ramlal would have sold his harvest to the state-owned Food Corporation of India for (roughly) Rs 58,000 per hectare, a profit of Rs 30,500 per hectare (without transportation cost). So, in good years, Ramlal prospered, but increasingly uncertain weather—as we shall see later—has upset a tenuous normalcy across rural north India.

Ramlal’s total losses are Rs 2,80,000, the state reimbursement covering less than 13% of crop-raising costs. Ramlal did not lose all his wheat. He estimated that 10% of the crop could be saved. A government estimate put that figure at 30%. It is hard to assess what the remnant might fetch. Ramlal said the harvested kernels were blackened and stunted, which means lower rates.

Like 80% of Indian farmers, Ramlal does not have crop insurance, an agricultural dysfunction that leaves governments liable—not by law but by political necessity. At least 600 million Indians still depend on farming, although the share of agriculture in India’s gross domestic farmers is declining. Prime Minister Narendra Modi promised an increase in compensation and dispatched senior ministers to visit farms in 14 States.

Currently, Ramlal’s only concern is how the government assesses his crop losses. There are two ways of establishing such losses, said Sudhir Panwar, a member of UP’s Planning Commission. One is by satellites that pass over an area and use special sensors and cameras to determine damage in fields. Remote sensing, as the technique is called, is reasonably accurate but only offers a block- or taluk-level view. The second mode is a subjective assessment by the local Lekhpal, the local revenue officer. These assessments may be an easier method of reaching individual farmers, but they are greatly inaccurate.

UP and 13 other states hit by the recent crisis largely depend on the lekhpal. Revenue officials are hardly equipped to assess the damage and there are very few of them to take care of large geographical areas. The result is “guesstimates.” On March 24, 2015, the agriculture ministry estimated that crops on 18 million hectares—about 30% of the rabi crop—were damaged. Two days later, this was reduced to nearly 11 million hectares.

IndiaSpend’s previous reports on yields and food security make it clear that farms depend too much on increasingly uncertain rainfall: while there wasn’t enough rain during the pre-monsoon kharif season (July-October) last year, there has been vastly excess rainfall during this rabi season (October-March).

Agriculture’s fortunes are linked to—and affect—India’s economy, but as the chart below shows, India’s economy in general is doing much better than its agricultural sector, which is gripped by low growth and low output.

The last–and, increasingly, first– resort, loans Back in Rajwada village, Ramlal–considering his future–reluctantly admitted to another problem: unpaid bank loans. Uncomfortable talking about loans, as the relatively prosperous tend to be, Ramlal said he took a loan in October last year, during the sowing season. He would not say how much he borrowed.

He has no savings to repay these loans.“I will have to get a fresh loan for the next cropping season,” said Ramlal, now part of the 52% of indebted Indian farming households. Since banks do not allow new loans until previous debts are repaid, Ramlal—although he did not admit it—might end up at a moneylender. Ramlal said he would pull together what he can from “all sources”.

More forthcoming was a poorer Rajwada farmer, Dev Joo, 90, whom we revisited from a previous Gaon Connection and IndiaSpend story. Joo took a loan of Rs 9,000 on his Kisaan (farmer’s) credit card but he could not make repayments because of successive crop losses. He now owes the bank Rs 18,000, including interest. Joo could go to a moneylender, but that means the cycle of debt will continue.

Joo’s only solution is to work as a labourer, a situation that millions of farmers are forced into, something that he is preparing himself for. As the livelihoods of more than half of all Indians living on farm incomes decline, government data show that about 9 million people quit cultivation between 2001 and 2011, and the number of agricultural labourers grew by 38 million.

“Mazdoori karke poora karenge, aur kya karen? (I will do manual labour and repay my debts, what else to do?),” said Joo. But such labour does not pay more than Rs 150 per day, and there aren’t that many opportunities in Lalitpur. As for Ramlal, becoming a labourer is not something he would like to contemplate.

(Tripathi is Senior Reporter at Gaon Connection, a rural newspaper published in Hindi from Lucknow. Tewari is an analyst with IndiaSpend.)

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