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A price too high for Indian farmers
By Raju Bist

MUMBAI - In his first-ever address to the nation last week, Indian Prime Minister Manmohan Singh promised his government would take steps to alleviate the sufferings of the farming community. Singh's assurance was prompted by a spate of suicides by farmers in various states.

Typically shy in such matters, the government is not forthcoming on the exact number of farmers who have lost their lives in this manner. But media reports and estimates by non-government organizations (NGOs) put the number at around 3,500 over the past one-and-a-half years. In Andhra Pradesh, the worst-affected state, a rising death toll led to a chief minister losing his chair. In neighboring Kerala, the National Human Rights Commission asked the state government for a complete dossier on the deaths, and suicides by farmers have been reported from even the progressive agricultural regions of Karnataka.

The three aforementioned states are in the southern part of the country, but the crisis has engulfed other areas too. Farmers have taken their lives in the prosperous northern state of Punjab, often referred to as India's granary. In Uttar Pradesh, it has been sugarcane farmers; in Maharashtra, cotton growers. Suicides have also been reported from the eastern states of Orissa and West Bengal.

But the problem is most acute in Andhra Pradesh, which ironically was being developed as a hi-tech information technology state and had even placed a bid to acquire a Formula One race track. In just one week beginning May 17, 42 farmers committed suicide in the state where 70% of the population makes a living from agriculture. Over the next 10 days, another 55 either consumed pesticides or hung themselves from trees in their fields. Most of these farmers were men in the 40 to 50 age group.

The state government, led by new Chief Minister Y S Rajasekhara Reddy, recently announced a compensation of Rs 150,000 (US$3,271) for the family of each victim. Reddy immediately put forth a laundry list of reasons for the suicides: incessant floods; manipulation of prices by traders; supply of spurious pesticides and seeds; decline in prices of agricultural produce; increase in the cost of agricultural inputs; successive drought in recent years and of course, neglect of farmers by the previous state government.

He cleverly failed to mention the main cause: humiliation as a result of harassment by private moneylenders. Only a quarter of the Indian farming community turns to organized financial institutions for credit. The remaining majority, in order to avoid red tape and corruption, seek help from private moneylenders who charge sky-high interest rates of between 30 and 60%. When the farmers fail to pay the loans back on time, the moneylenders often resort to strong-arm tactics. There have also been cases of the farmers' female family members being molested.

A study conducted by India's National Institute of Rural Development reported that most of the suicide victims are marginal, small and medium farmers with no staying power. It presented actual cases of insult and disgrace meted out to them that led to suicide. Unlike industrialists, farmers do not have access to debt relief acts. Once they become indebted to private money lenders they cannot approach any public authority to declare themselves insolvent. The report observes: "Debt trap is getting tightened because of agrarian crisis and inaccessibility to institutional credit."

Successive governmental cutbacks in fertilizer and power subsidies have added to the cost of cultivation. Liberal import policies are also hurting the farmer. For example, in Karnataka, factories used to buy sugarcane from the farmer at Rs 1,700 per 100 kilograms in 1991. Today, the purchase price has dropped down to Rs 1,100 per 100 kilograms. As if this was not enough, the farmer has also to compete against imported sugar which is available at Rs 850 per 100 kilograms.

Social workers lay the blame on other factors too. "[Economic] liberalization, privatization and globalization, the three evil faces staring at us today, have pushed us towards a suicidal state and the worst affected are the farmers, the country's backbone," declares Rajiv Dixit, the man behind the Azadi Bachao Andolan (Save Independence Movement). Modern thinkers, he says, have neglected the agricultural sector totally and the farmers have been left to fend for themselves. Thousands of farmers committed suicide during the summer months only because their various state governments failed to help them with support for their produce when the monsoon, too, failed them, Dixit adds.

Local factors have added to their woes. As a result of the severe drought last year, there is now a shortage of groundnut seeds in the states of Gujarat, Rajasthan, Uttar Pradesh, Madhya Pradesh and Chattisgarh. Only 52 million kilograms of the seeds are available when the requirement is of 58.6 million kilograms. In West Bengal, often praised for its agrarian reforms over the years - particularly in for the distribution of land to landless farmers - five government-run fertilizer-manufacturing companies have shut down in recent months.

The farmer suicide issue has become a hot political potato countrywide, especially after the complete rout of the ruling Telugu Desam Party in Andhra Pradesh's recent local elections. Ousted chief minister Chandrababu Naidu was accused of paying more attention to the computerization of his state even as his farmers were giving up their lives. But things have not improved for Reddy. In the fortnight after he took over, 50 more farmers committed suicide. Alarmed, the state government and several organizations appealed to the distressed farmers not to commit suicide. Last month, the government flagged off a rally to create awareness among farmers about the schemes launched to address their problems.

Reddy himself led a rally of prominent citizens to express support to the farming community. His government, he promised, would pay more attention to agriculture. Reddy, who came to power after a 1,400 kilometer-long "mass contact program", revealed he had finalized a program through which 7 million acres of land will be brought under irrigation at a cost of Rs 460 billion. He also announced the setting up of telephonic help lines in districts where most suicides have been reported.

The Andhra Pradesh government is working out a moratorium on farm loans. It is looking at the possibility of giving farmers loans at the ludicrously low rate of 3% per annum and a comprehensive crop insurance scheme. It is setting up a department for the development of a rain shadow area apart from planning scientific cloud seeding.

Various other state governments are now announcing new irrigation schemes as well as special financial packages aimed at farmers. Karnataka has announced a Rs 9 billion drought relief package which includes interest waivers on cooperative bank loans, input subsidies for seeds and planting material, price support for select crops and the waiver of outstanding power dues on agricultural pump sets. The state government has also issued the Karnataka Prohibition of Charging Exorbitant Interest Ordinance, according to which it is illegal to charge an interest rate above 21% in the case of an unsecured loan and 23% in the case of a secured loan.

The central government, too, has jumped on the bandwagon and is expected to announce various relief measures for the farming sector in the forthcoming national budget on July 6. The communist parties, which support the United Progressive Alliance government in New Delhi led by the Congress Party, have asked for a freeze on the recovery of all rural debt for one year to give farmers some much-needed confidence. They also want a comprehensive law to be enacted to free farmers from indebtedness. The central government has already announced a major package for farmers to increase farm credit from institutional sources by 30% and coverage of an additional 5 million farmers in this fiscal year.

According to Food and Agriculture Minister Sharad Pawar, the loss in yield or output per hectare and farmers' suicides were directly linked to the lack of credit. "A sizeable section of farmers are defaulters. Avenues will be explored to provide them credit for facilitating purchase of better inputs," he has said. He regretted that the economical reforms process had bypassed agriculture and added that the government would look into the issue of allowing freer inter-state movement of grains.

The Reserve Bank of India, the country's central bank, has relaxed norms governing bad loans in the agricultural sector in a move aimed to help farmers in distress and to increase the flow of credit. After restructuring an old bad loan, a farmer would be eligible for a fresh one, the central bank said. Banks would also be encouraged to go in for one-time settlements with small and marginal farmers who have been declared defaulters.

At first look, all these measures seem well-intentioned and if carried to their logical conclusion, should definitely benefit farmers, the constituency they are aimed at. The danger lies in their being initiated by the political class. As has always happened in the past, there is the fear of fund leakages and good intentions going astray as a result of various political parties playing the game of one-upmanship.

Around 350 million Indians are employed by the farm sector. Media statistics alone cannot truly portray the tragedy that is being enacted in farms all across the country. The present crisis did not come overnight. Wrong central and state government policies over the past two decades, along with little investment in agriculture, have reduced the once-proud Indian farmer to the status of a beggar. The panacea lies beyond politicians merely scoring brownie points and making capital out of a desperate situation. What is urgently needed is for governments to take steps to provide a genuine healing touch to a badly scarred community.

Perhaps that touch can be provided by Manmohan Singh himself. Finding the situation getting out of his control, Chief Minister Reddy rushed to New Delhi over the weekend. "The Prime Minister has agreed to visit two districts of Andhra Pradesh early next month," he told journalists on Sunday. "He will personally interact with the distressed farmers." It will be his first trip out of the national capital since taking over as prime minister in May.

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Jun 29, 2004




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