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Introduction:
Depending on Monsoon for irrigation:
Each year in India, one half of a billion people pray for rain. The rain has to be just right. Too little and there is drought. Too much and there are floods. In either of these cases, their agricultural crop does not provide them sufficient livelihood. Misery generally follows in its wake. Seven decades after independence, Indian agriculture remains hostage to the whims of the rain gods during the monsoon season. The principal reason for this is that 73 million hectares out of a net sown area of 141 million hectares are unirrigated and rainfall dependent. The spatial distribution of rain too has deep impact. This year, for instance, rains have been plentiful in central and south India, normal in western India and deficient in the east and the North-East. Even though food grain production will probably top a record 280 million tonnes this year (third year of record in a row), there will be large geographical pockets of output deficiency and household stress.
Reasons mentioned & Data from Economic Survey:
To add insult to injury, climate change is likely to add long-run volatility to agricultural yield. The Economic Survey 2017-18 (Chapter 6) suggests that farmer income losses could range from 15% to 18% and could rise to between 20% and 25% in unirrigated areas. The survey asserts that in the absence of adaptation by farmers and changes in policy, there is likely to be an average loss of 12%. An increase in average temperatures, a decline in average rainfall and an increase in the number of dry days may together conspire to create this impact.
The survey also points out that while real Indian agricultural output growth has grown from about 2% average in the first decades to over 3% now and the annual volatility (measured by standard deviation) has been reduced from 6% to about 3%, the growth is below China’s and the volatility of output is higher than China’s for the same period.
How Agricultural Reforms evolved in China:
After disastrous experimentation with the Great Leap Forward in the late 1950s by Chairman Mao Zedong, China’s serious agricultural reform began in 1978. Deng Xiaoping decollectivized agriculture and handed back control of farming to households (a certain portion of output was required to be sold back to the state).
In the first 20 years of reform, food grain output increased from 300 million to 500 million tonnes. At the same time, cereal centricity was replaced by a focus on meat, eggs, aquatic product and fruit. This shift in assortment was very successful with cereal production per capita increasing by 27% but aquatic and fruit production increasing 700% in the first two decades.
In some ways, China’s challenges are tougher than India’s, with only 15% of total land being arable in China (against about 40% in India) and vast areas being inhospitable to agriculture in the north, north-west and south-west of the country. China has also a shorter agricultural season than India (five months versus 10 months).
Despite the spectacular past success, the country has now become a net importer of food and Chinese agriculture faces challenges from water shortage and climate change. The focus of Chinese agriculture policy has shifted from quantity to quality and better water and fertilizer use.
What should India do?
India’s agricultural policy for the next decade should shift away from cereal (and quantity) centricity and be primarily focused on water effectiveness. For political reasons, Indian policy has not been able to evolve from “farmer welfare” to “agricultural household sustainability”.
The lack of long-term policy planning combined with a welfare-oriented policy results in a periodic loan-waiver approach which perpetuates a poor credit culture in the agriculture sector and, consequently, a fragile state balance sheet. This is a vicious circle of waiver addiction and debt, both at the rural household and state level.
Federal policy itself is trapped by the seventh schedule of the Constitution, which makes agriculture, dairy, meat and fisheries a state subject.
Government Initiatives:
Government has initiated many schemes to make farmers aware of the benefits of micro-irrigation such as a Centrally Sponsored Scheme (2006), National Mission on Micro-irrigation (2010), National Mission on Sustainable Agriculture (2014) and the recent Pradhan Mnatri Krishi Sinchayi yojana. The latest scheme PMKSY Per Drop More Crop is an important micro-irrigation scheme that focuses on District Level implementation of the scheme making district magistrates directly accountable. This scheme has been constantly publicized on all forms of media and is also being taught at various Kisan Melas. It becomes all the more important to use micro-irrigation and save water in all spheres of life when 54% of India faces high water stress. The government has come up with a Rs. 6,000-crore World Bank-aided Atal Bhujal Yojana with community participation to ensure sustained groundwater management in overexploited and ground water-stressed areas in seven States.
Conclusion:
Most of the Indians are directly or indirectly depending on the agriculture. Some are directly attached with the farming and some other people are involved in doing business with these goods. India has the capacity to produce the food grains which can make vast difference in Indian Economy.
To achieve targeted mark by the government it needs to provide support in case of land, bank loans and other machineries to the small farmers along with the big farmers with this we can expect improvement in Indian economy.
Way Forward:
By: Priyank Kishore ProfileResourcesReport error
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