
Delhi border is sealed and the farmers are waiting for getting an appointment with the government to at least listen to them. They do not know that the job of the government is to make good laws and their reprint versions. The poor farmers also don’t know that it is their own responsibility to understand those futuristic laws and bills.
The current series of the following three bills are not new
3. The essential commodity ( Amendment Bill Act 2020).
These are almost an extended and repetitive versions of
3. Significant change in fixation of MSP 2018
Interestingly all these laws are also deconstructed versions of APMC modernization act of 2003.
Since independence all the policies in the country related to farmers’ development are based on the doctrine of Mahatma Gandhi that “ Mass production is production by masses”. Today after investing billions of dollars in agri-subsidies, loan waivers, infrastructure development , APMC formation , cold storage infrastructure development and export subsidies, we are finding that economies of scale is the only way forward.
We have also begun to realize that such economies of scale is possible by shifting ownership of farmers from the Government to the corporates.
a. The material input cost for a crop incurred by the farmer
b. The material input cost + labor cost ( or the opportunity cost for working as a labor at MGNREGA or other’s farm)
c. The material input cost + labor cost ( or the opportunity cost for working as a labor at MGNREGA or other’s farm) + Cost of capital + the prevailing land lease value for the crop period. (C1)
The committee recommended that the MSP must be 50% more than the third cost or the C1 as computed above. Interestingly Dr Verghese Kurien was also of the opinion that dairy farmers must get at least 50% more than his costs. Another committee later also recommended for sugar cane that the MSP must be 75% of the levied sugar price as per the quota of the sugar mill. As per the prevailing MSPs out of 23 crops only Bajra with an MSP of Rs 2250 per quintal matches the Swami Nathan committee’s recommendation and all other MSPs are below the C1 .
In recent times the farmers of Punjab are stated to get an average of Rs 1000 per quintal for their Maize against MSP of Rs 1850 .
Now in such circumstances, farmers do not need another bill or law. Rather they need education and enough of awareness about these laws and government policies through the extension department. Today it is also suggested that the agri-scientists from the corporate sector will help farmers to grow better their crops for doubling their incomes.
Wasn’t it the job of a large pool of scientists and agronomists working in agriculture universities, ministries and state agriculture departments since the ages?
a. How do Indian farmers understand these laws?
b. Who will educate them on doing business online?
c. Who will train them to bargain with the corporate buyers?
d. Who will provide them infrastructure for bandwidth, smartphones, electricity for scaling up etc?
e. Who will help them learn the legal contracts to be carried out at FPO and at corporate level?
I think the government must convert all the Panchayats in the country as Agriculture University and create a help desk in all the villages so that all the issues and business of the farmers are handled inside their villages only.
That may be the true empowerment of farmers in the country.
A blog by Kuldeep Sharma