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Why are Indian farmers shifting towards high-cost seed varieties despite technological and ecological concerns? Assess its implications for farm economics and rural livelihoods.

Kartavya Desk Staff

Topic: Major crops cropping patterns in various parts of the country

Topic: Major crops cropping patterns in various parts of the country

Q5. Why are Indian farmers shifting towards high-cost seed varieties despite technological and ecological concerns? Assess its implications for farm economics and rural livelihoods. (10 M)

Difficulty Level: Medium

Reference: DTE

Why the question The silent spread of unapproved herbicide-tolerant cotton in states like Madhya Pradesh highlights gaps in farm extension, rising costs, and ecological risks, making it a relevant governance and sustainability issue. Key demand of the question To explain the drivers pushing farmers towards costly seed adoption despite concerns, and to analyse its broader consequences for farm economics and rural society. Structure of the Answer: Introduction Situate the issue in the context of Bt cotton stagnation, pest resistance, and farmer dependence on new technologies. Body Reasons for shift – pest resistance, labour scarcity, aspirations for higher yield, influence of informal seed networks, perceived dual benefits. Implications – rising input burden, market vulnerability, ecological and health risks, loss of crop diversity, rural inequalities. Conclusion Stress the need for balancing farmer aspirations with biosafety, affordable innovation, and stronger public R&D.

Why the question The silent spread of unapproved herbicide-tolerant cotton in states like Madhya Pradesh highlights gaps in farm extension, rising costs, and ecological risks, making it a relevant governance and sustainability issue.

Key demand of the question To explain the drivers pushing farmers towards costly seed adoption despite concerns, and to analyse its broader consequences for farm economics and rural society.

Structure of the Answer:

Introduction Situate the issue in the context of Bt cotton stagnation, pest resistance, and farmer dependence on new technologies.

Reasons for shift – pest resistance, labour scarcity, aspirations for higher yield, influence of informal seed networks, perceived dual benefits.

Implications – rising input burden, market vulnerability, ecological and health risks, loss of crop diversity, rural inequalities.

Conclusion Stress the need for balancing farmer aspirations with biosafety, affordable innovation, and stronger public R&D.

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

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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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