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Agriculture in the Age of Inequality

Kartavya Desk Staff

Syllabus: Agriculture

Source: TF

Context: The article exposes the systemic erosion of India’s farm economy due to corporate capture, predatory commercialization, and decades of neoliberal policies.

About Agriculture in the Age of Inequality:

Data and Statistics on Agriculture:

Farmer Suicides: Over 4,00,000 farmers have died by suicide since 1995; NCRB (2022) reported 11,290 deaths, indicating that over one farmer dies every hour due to indebtedness and market distress.

Income Decline: The NSS 77th Round (2018–19) reveals that average farm household income is ₹10,218/month, marking a 10% decline from 2012–13, reflecting stagnation amid rising costs.

Employment Exodus: Between 1991 and 2011, India lost nearly 15 million full-time cultivators, with 2,000 farmers quitting agriculture every day, signalling a collapse in rural viability.

Inequality Ratio: The 217 Indian billionaires’ wealth (US$1.04 trillion) equals 58× the agriculture budget, exposing a stark contrast between rural poverty and elite accumulation.

Falling Terms of Trade: Cotton’s purchasing power plunged—farmers who once bought 12 gm of gold per quintal in the 1970s can’t buy 1 gm today, showing the widening gap between input inflation and stagnant output prices.

Importance of Agriculture in India:

Economic Backbone: Agriculture sustains 45% of India’s workforce and contributes ~18% of GDP, serving as the foundation of livelihood and national growth.

Food Security Anchor: It ensures self-sufficiency in food grains, stabilizes prices, and cushions inflation shocks, making it the cornerstone of nutritional security.

Social Stability: Acts as a shock absorber during unemployment and pandemics (e.g., COVID-19 reverse migration), highlighting its role as a rural safety net.

Cultural Identity: Embodies India’s civilizational ethos of dharti-mata, symbolizing harmony between humans, soil, and seasons—a moral rhythm of sustenance.

Intersectoral Linkages: Fuels MSMEs, transport, and food industries, generating demand chains that stimulate rural-urban economic interdependence.

Inequality and Its Link to Agriculture:

Policy Bias: Post-1991 liberalization favoured capital-intensive corporates, reducing public investment, subsidies, and credit flow to smallholders.

Corporate Penetration: Agribusiness giants now dominate seeds, logistics, and markets, eroding farmer autonomy and traditional cooperatives.

Eg: Bayer-Monsanto’s seed-pricing disputes in India show how monopoly control depresses farmer margins.

Market Distortions: Weak MSP enforcement and mandi deregulation have shifted price control to traders, worsening income asymmetry.

Eg: In 2023-24, paddy farmers in Bihar earned ₹1,850/qtl—₹250 below MSP—while corporate buyers cornered procurement through contract channels.

Rural Deprivation: Cuts in irrigation, insurance, and research widened regional disparities, trapping farmers in debt cycles and uncertainty.

Eg: Vidarbha and Bundelkhand, with low irrigation coverage (< 15%), account for over a quarter of India’s farm suicides.

Wealth Concentration: Fiscal “incentives” for corporates and tax leniency transferred vast public resources away from small cultivators.

Eg: By 2024, the top 10 agribusinesses received loans worth ₹1.3 lakh cr—five times more than all small and marginal farmers combined—reflecting a systemic transfer of resources upward.

Implications of Agrarian Inequality:

Rural Exodus: Widespread distress forces millions to migrate to cities, swelling informal labour and urban poverty belts.

Nutritional Crisis: Families now sell milk and cereals once meant for home use, worsening child malnutrition and food insecurity.

Erosion of Democracy: Corporate capture of policy space weakens panchayati raj institutions and grassroots accountability.

Social Discontent: The Delhi Farmers’ Protest (2020–21) symbolized democratic assertion against policy centralization and inequality.

Ecological Stress: Monocropping, chemical-intensive farming, and climate shocks are accelerating soil depletion and biodiversity loss.

Way Ahead:

Reinvest in Public Agriculture: Expand rural infrastructure, irrigation, and R&D while guaranteeing fair MSP and public procurement mechanisms.

Rebalance Policy Priorities: Redirect subsidies, credit, and insurance toward small farmers, FPOs, and agro-cooperative ecosystems.

Empower Local Governance: Strengthen panchayats, SHGs, and producer groups to ensure decentralized, participatory planning.

Diversify Livelihoods: Encourage agro-ecological and allied sectors (dairy, fisheries, food processing) to create rural non-farm employment.

Social Safety and Ethics: Revitalize MGNREGS, crop insurance, and grievance systems with transparency and ethical oversight to uphold dignity.

Conclusion:

India’s agrarian decline mirrors a deeper moral imbalance between profit and people. The solution lies not in abandoning agriculture but in re-humanizing it through justice, dignity, and sustainability. Reviving the countryside is thus not charity—it is the reclamation of India’s collective conscience.

AI-assisted content, editorially reviewed by Kartavya Desk Staff.

About Kartavya Desk Staff

Articles in our archive published before our editorial team was expanded. Legacy content is periodically reviewed and updated by our current editors.

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