Preview

Plight of Indian Farmers

Powerful Essays
Open Document
Open Document
1542 Words
Grammar
Grammar
Plagiarism
Plagiarism
Writing
Writing
Score
Score
Plight of Indian Farmers
Plight of Indian Farmers with Respect to current Credit Facilities

Plight of the Indian Farmer
India is an agrarian country and around 60% of its people directly or indirectly depend upon agriculture. Agriculture in India is often attributed as gambling with monsoons because of its almost exclusive dependency on precipitation from monsoons. The failure of these monsoons can lead to a series of droughts, lack of better prices, and exploitation of the farmers by middlemen, all of which have led to a series of suicides committed by farmers across India.
Things have always been bleak for the Indian farmer. Here the term ‘farmer’ is used to describe the agriculturists with very small land holdings or no land ownership at all. The policies of the government and the often-lackadaisical attitude of the bureaucracy are responsible for the sorry plight of the farmer.
Even the so-called ‘Green Revolution’ was successful only in patches. Not many small farmers could reap the benefits of the technology that required large tracts of land and lot of money. The policy makers ignored the need for creating infrastructural facilities like irrigation and storage and not to mention the transport facilities.
Some of the main causes of the farmers’ mass suicide is due to absence of adequate social support infrastructure at the level of the village and district, uncertainty of agricultural enterprise in India, indebtedness of farmers, rising costs of cultivation, plummeting prices of farm commodities, lack of credit for small farmers, relative absence of irrigation facilities, repeated crop failures.
India is transforming rapidly into a primarily urban, industrial society with industry as its main source of income; which is why the government and society remains unconcerned about the condition of the countryside. Moreover, a downturn in the urban economy pushes a large number of distressed non-farmers to try their hand at cultivation; in the absence of any responsible counseling either

You May Also Find These Documents Helpful

  • Best Essays

    Sks7000-8 Assignment 3

    • 1572 Words
    • 7 Pages

    South Asia is one of the most densely populated regions of the world, where despite a slow growth, agriculture remains the backbone of rural economy as it employs one half to over 90 percent of the labor force. Both extensive and intensive policy measures for agriculture development to feed the massive population of the region have resulted in land degradation and desertification, water scarcity, pollution from agrochemicals, and loss of agricultural biodiversity. The social and ethical aspects portray even a grimmer picture of the region with growing poverty mainly, amongst small farmers, food scarcity, and overall poor quality of…

    • 1572 Words
    • 7 Pages
    Best Essays
  • Good Essays

    Agriculture in India

    • 969 Words
    • 4 Pages

    A variety of factors, natural, technological, institutional, economic and social can be cited to explain the backwardness of our agriculture Nature is bounteous and gives us all, but it gives erratically and often snatches with one hand what it gives with the other. If monsoons are kind, fields look resplendent with bright green saplings but hailstorms lash there mercilessly or floods wash them away, and if we are fortunate enough to escape the wrath of all this, we are sure to be oppressed by locusts and other pest epidemics. The last three years saw severe drought conditions in the country especially in Gujarat and Rajasthan. Technological factors include primitive equipment, lack of irrigation facilities and inadequate availability of fertilizers. Institutional factors imply uneconomical size of holdings and defective land-tenurial system. Social and economic factors include the ignorance and superstitiousness of the farmers and their vulnerability on financial issues.…

    • 969 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    Tata Nano Controversy

    • 14170 Words
    • 57 Pages

    References: Ahluwalia, M.S. 2000. “Economic Performance of States in the Post-Reforms Period.” Economic and Political Weekly. May 6: 1637-48. Bannerjee, P. 2006. “Land Acquisition and Peasant Resistance at Singur,” Economic and Political Weekly, 41(46): 4718-4720. Bardhan, P. 2011. ‘Challenges For a Minimum Social Democracy in India.” Economic and Political Weekly. 46(10): 39-43. March 5. Basu, P.P. 2007. “’Brand Buddha’ in India’s West Bengal.” Asian Survey, 47(2): 288-306. Besley, T., R. Burgess, and B. Esteve-Volart. 2007. “The Policy Origins of Poverty and Growth in India.” In Delivering On the Promise of Pro-Poor Growth, T. Besley and L. Cord. (ed.,). Palgrave Macmillan and World Bank. Bhaduri, A. 2007. “Alternatives in Industrialization.” Economic and Political Weekly, pages 1597-1601. May 5. Chattopadhyay, S.S. 2006. “Land Reform Not an End in Itself,” Frontline 23(25). http://www.frontlineonnet.com/f12325/stories/20061229001903600.htm Chaudhuri, A. 2011. “Mapping a Political Challeng: Bengal 2009.” In Paul Wallace and Ramashray Roy (eds.) India’s 2009 Elections: Coalition Politics, Party Competition and Congress Continuity. Sage Publications. March. Gupta, D. 2005. “Whither the Indian Village: Culture and Agriculture in ‘Rural’ India.” Economic and Political Weekly, 40(8): 751-758. Indian Express, 2010. “How They Got It Right” September 17. (In Sunday Express, article written by Syed Khalique Ahmed). Jones, J.D. 2009. Negotiating Development: A Study of the Grassroots Resistance to India’s 2005 Special Economic Zones Act. Unpublished Ph.D. Dissertation, University of Florida. Kohli, A. 2006a. “Politics of Economic Growth in India, 1980-2005, Part I: The 1980s.”Economic and Political Weekly. April 1:1251-59. Kohli, A. 2006b. “Politics of Economic Growth in India, 1980-2005, Part II: The 1990s and Beyond.” Economic and Political Weekly. April 8: 1361-70. Mohanty, M. 2008. “Singur and the Political Economy of Structural Change.” Indian Institute of Management Calcutta, Working Paper Series. WPS No. 601, February. 25…

    • 14170 Words
    • 57 Pages
    Powerful Essays
  • Best Essays

    Kisan Call Centres

    • 3159 Words
    • 13 Pages

    The Indian Agriculture has been an area with varied challenges. This sector is responsible for the growth rate and generating a per capita income. This sector generates a whopping 28% of the total GDP of India and over 15% of the total exports. This proves how a sound agricultural development is significant for the total economic progress. Almost 37 % of country’s total cultivated land has prosperous irrigation supply. But the other percentage is that of the rain fed land where it becomes a challenge to get a good yield because of instability and the gaps due to technology transfer.…

    • 3159 Words
    • 13 Pages
    Best Essays
  • Good Essays

    Agriculture in India

    • 44550 Words
    • 179 Pages

    Indian agriculture is facing a new set of challenges. The growth of the economy leading to…

    • 44550 Words
    • 179 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    Limited. It provides an analysis of the key challenges facing the agricultural sector in India…

    • 4672 Words
    • 19 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Good Essays

    Gulfam Hasan, 2Dr. Ijaz Ashraf, 3Dr. Khalid Mehmood Ch., 4 Aqeela Sagheer, 5 Muhammad Qavi…

    • 3113 Words
    • 13 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    is less than one hectare and in certain parts it is less than even 0.5…

    • 3287 Words
    • 18 Pages
    Powerful Essays
  • Best Essays

    Food Security

    • 4879 Words
    • 17 Pages

    India. Union Government also addresses this issue in their five year plans to bring in more…

    • 4879 Words
    • 17 Pages
    Best Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    of the key challenges for the vast agrarian population in India. Far a large section of farmers, the…

    • 1816 Words
    • 9 Pages
    Powerful Essays
  • Good Essays

    Farmer Suicide

    • 637 Words
    • 3 Pages

    India is an agrarian country with around 60% of its people directly or indirectly depend upon agriculture. Agriculture in India is often attributed as gambling with monsoons because of its almost exclusive dependency on precipitation from monsoons. The failure of these monsoons leading to a series of droughts, lack of better prices, exploitation by Middlemen, all of which have led to a series of suicidescommitted by farmers across India.…

    • 637 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    The National Rural Employment Guarantee Act (2005) was enacted by the Indian Parliament in 2005 to provide a minimum guaranteed wage employment of one hundred days in every fiscal year to rural households with unemployed adult members prepared to do unskilled manual work. Since its enactment in 200 districts, it was extended to overall country of India. The basis for the National Rural Employment Guarantee Act (NREGA) in India emerged from the thinking that a society which has failed to reduce the unemployment problem in six decades of development cannot ask its unemployed to wait indefinitely for the utterly uncertain prospect of employment growth catching up with population growth or income growth. India’s rural workforce had clearly not benefited from the marked acceleration of the GDP since the eighties and agriculture as a livelihood was facing a series of crises with the prospect of an imminent structural collapse. The consequent rise in distress migration, hunger, starvation deaths, farmer suicides, and violence in the countryside were understandable and improving measures necessitated an employment guarantee backed by the State.…

    • 3908 Words
    • 16 Pages
    Powerful Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    After more than half a century of planned economic development and high level of aggregate growth over the last two decades we can’t outright say that the country’s vast rural sector has shown any spectacular progress or advancement. In fact, India has demonstrated a static progress as lakhs of villages inhabited by crores of farmers; tenants etc have not experienced any fruit of planned development. As we know that it is impossible to bring about social and human development in the midst of economic deprivation and a major factor behind it is unemployment (and also underemployment and disguised unemployment). Unemployed persons lack economic empowerment which deprives them and also those persons dependent on the former, of access to goods and services required for their wellbeing. The government of India which is always aware of the dismal rural economic scenerio has left no stone unturned to fight out the hurdles on the way to rural development during the planning period beginning in 1951. The implementation of the trail-blazing…

    • 2454 Words
    • 10 Pages
    Powerful Essays
  • Best Essays

    AGRI BUSINESS

    • 2048 Words
    • 9 Pages

    Agriculture sector alone contributes towards 23 percent of India’s gross national product (GNP). It sustain the livelihood of nearly of nearly 70% of the population of India.…

    • 2048 Words
    • 9 Pages
    Best Essays
  • Better Essays

    DEVELOPMENT PERSPECTIVE

    • 11242 Words
    • 45 Pages

    Some salient features of Punjab may be recapitulated. It enjoys the highest per capita income in the country (Rs. 23,043 against the national average of Rs. 15,562 in 1999-2000), and is highlighted as a model of agricultural development. Here poverty is not an issue; achieving a higher level of economic well-being or becoming more affluent is! People can move to a greener pasture anywhere in the world if the opportunities at home are not attractive…

    • 11242 Words
    • 45 Pages
    Better Essays

Related Topics