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.