Farmers of India
While a young farmer in prosperous
Gujarat allegedly set himself on fire last week demanding a higher
support price for cotton triggering a series of farmers’ protests across
the State, the Intelligence Bureau (IB) has submitted a report to the
Prime Minister Office (PMO) on the failure to seriously address the
problem of rising number of farmer suicides.
According to the
National Crime Records Bureau (NCRB) 11,772 farmers had reportedly
committed suicide in 2013. In the past 17 years, close to 300,000
farmers have committed suicide.
The IB report
states that farmer suicides are showing an increasing trend in
Maharashtra, Telengana, Karnataka and Punjab. It is fast spreading in
Gujarat, Uttar Pradesh and Tamil Nadu where farmer suicides is emerging a
recent trend. While Vidharbha in Maharashtra is widely known as the
suicide hot spot, the serial death dance is taking the lives of two
farmers on an average every day even in the frontline agricultural State
of Punjab.
Although the IB has blamed suicides
on natural as well as man-made factors like pricing policies and
inadequate marketing facilities among the various causes, I don’t
understand the reason why IB should be getting into areas where it’s
expertise is almost zero. Setting a bad precedent, the IB had earlier
come out with a report accusing some non-governmental organizations
(NGOs) and activists for holding up the country’s development process.
It had even gone to the extent of computing the loss in terms of
country’s GDP.
Let me make it
clear. The IB has no expertise to measure GDP. Nor has the IB got
scientific acumen and ability to understand the implications of
genetically-modified crops on human health and environment or for that
matter on whether or not nuclear plants are safe that it can be asked to
deliver a verdict. Similarly, the IB suggestions on what needs to be
done to put an end to the shameful scourge of farmer suicides show that
the entire exercise is politically motivated. Otherwise there is no
justification for IB to ignore its primary role of providing timely
intelligence about subversive activities. Let’s not forget the IB had
come in for sharp criticism for serious lapses in intelligence that led
to the 2008 Mumbai terror attacks.
What the IB has
said in its report on farmer suicides is nothing new. All the
suggestions it has come up with have been simply collated from various
committee reports, academic studies and newspaper articles. Farmer
suicides is one of the most analysed subject with truckloads of academic
research papers, and has led to least 20 separate central and
state-level committees to the affected regions. Some popular films in
Hindi and regional languages like Marathi, Telgu and Malyalam have also
been made on the subject of farmer suicides.
Where the fault
lies is the failure to come out with a comprehensive solution.
Short-term measures like compensation to the next of the kin of the
deceased, loan-waivers and relief packages, including some efforts to
provide psychiatric advice to farmers, have miserably failed to stem the
tide. Policymakers have refused to go beyond these ‘short-term’
measures. While numerous relief packages, including the Rs 1,100-crore
package declared by Gujarat as late as on Dec 15 and Maharashtra’s
demand for Rs 4,500-crore from the Centre for drought-affected farmers
have been forthcoming, no sincere effort has been made to radically
overhaul the intensive farming system that has led to the crisis.
Mounting debt
and the inability to source bank credit is part of the problem, but it
is not the primary reason for farmer suicides. It is also true that
increasing foray into the cultivation of cash crops like cotton and
sugarcane, and inadequate marketing facilities are among the numerous
reasons, but farmer suicides is a very complex and intricately woven
phenomenon that requires a much deeper understanding. It’s time to look
beyond growing indebtedness, and trace the reasons that lead to the
mounting burden of debt that forces farmers to succumb under pressure.
But what perhaps
is being simply glossed over is the declining trend in farm incomes
over the past few decades. Agriculture is no longer an economically
viable activity, and several studies have shown that farm incomes have
remain frozen (or declined) in the past 20 years. Even globally, studies
by UNCTAD show that farm incomes have remained static for two decades
if you adjust for inflation. In other words, what the farmer was getting
as wheat price in 1995 is no different from what he is getting in 2014.
The only difference being that while farmers in rich developed
countries get direct income support and subsidies, farmers in India are
left to survive on hope.
[100 Rupees = $1.6, £1.00]
Just one more example, if required, of the results of capitalist organisation of the world's productive system. Whether income support, subsidies, wage increases, minimum wage decrees or 'benefits' of one form or another these band-aids are only temporary, limited reforms. The answer for these farmers and for all the workers around the world is not to be found in any reform but in a system of production that removes the profit motive entirely in favour of common ownership of the world's wealth - socialism.
JS
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