March 5, 2001 Issue


India Today, March 5

BUDGET 2001
   

It's About Politics
The limits on Finance Minister Yashwant Sinha's budget this year are political. He has the prescription to put the economy on a high growth track, but hampered by vested interests, vote-bank politics and stubborn opposition parties, he is unlikely to deliver.

The Rot in Farming
Falling prices, stagnating production and diminishing returns are brewing an unparalleled crisis in farmlands across India. Ironically, the alarming situation has arisen despite an unprecedented 12 consecutive normal monsoons.

 

 
STATES
   

Creeping Paralysis
Doubts over Keshubhai Patel's fitness to rule are growing after his government failed to provide basic relief like tents to those affected by the earthquake. Despite having speedily restored electricity and water, which earned praise from some international agencies, criticism over Patel's poor marshalling of resources continues.

 

 

 
THE ARTS
   

Artless Artistry
The festival tried to exhibit the widest selection rather than the best, making it a disappointing show.

 

 
NEIGHBOURS
   

Stillness of Change
The legendary bamboo curtain is lifting to reveal that Myanmar isn't quite the "fascist Disneyland" it is made out to be. The winds of change have brought back English as the medium of instruction and Aung San Suu Kyi is talking to the military. After prolonged isolation, Yangon wants to face the world, but on its own terms.

 

 
SPORTS
 

Making It Happen
John Buchanan gives an exclusive insight into what it takes to coach the world's most successful team. He also enumerates what
he feels will be the Indian strengths that the Aussies
will have to watch out for.

 

 
CARE TODAY
 

Strategic Partners
As emphasis shifts from relief to rehabilitation, Care Today is selecting regions to focus on and NGOs to help it channelise aid. The involvement of victims is integral to the plan so that their dignity remains intact.

 

 
OTHER STORIES
    Fifth Column:
Tavleen Singh
 
    Kautilya:
Jairam Ramesh
 
     
    Politically Correct:
P. Chidambaram
 
    Books  
    Caplooks  
    Voices  
    Tremors  
    Confessional  
    Eyecatchers  
 



 
  Home  
 

COVER STORY: AGRICULTURE

...Cash Crops are in Ruins...

The Rot In Farming Spreads...
...As Farmers Can't
Sell Foodgrains
...
...While Plantations Perish...
A Disaster In the Making

What happens when you produce more than you can store, have stored more than you can sell, and eventually sell for less than what it cost to produce? Thousands of potato farmers in the Terai region in Uttar Pradesh are confronted with such questions, thanks to a bumper crop that has caused a tragic mismatch in demand and supply.

Potato is the primary crop in the region, with more than 80 per cent of the farmers growing the tuber. The region accounts for more than 25 per cent of the total potato produced in the country. Potato farmers store the potato in cold storages for about Rs 80 per quintal, taking it out and selling it before the arrival of the new crop.

Bumper Waste: Lack of post-harvest facilities cause distress sales.
 

"My input costs have quadrupled in 10 years. Gamabhai Karsanbhai, Gandhinagar, Gujarat

 

 

Gamabhai Karsanbhai Chaudhary is a compulsive flirt. In the past 10 years, he has tried four crops-mustard, castor, cotton and wheat-on his seven-acre farm, each change dragging him deeper into debt. It was not lack of water that let Karsanbhai down. It is only that his input costs have risen four times in the past decade while the selling price has only doubled.
 

But the bumper potato crop this year has queered the pitch. The fresh potato crop, which usually fetched Rs 180-200 for a quintal, was available for about Rs 93 a quintal. So there were no takers for the old stocks. Many farmers did not even take out their produce from the cold storages, fearing that it would not even fetch the Rs 80 storage charges. Saddled with potato stocks that nobody wanted, cold storage owners dumped the tuber on the roadsides and in open fields.

Raj Kumar from Mehrai village in Farrukhabad is one of those farmers who didn't pick up their crop because of the crash in potato prices. "I had to mortgage my five bighas of land when I failed to repay Rs 10,000 to a moneylender," he laments. Gayadin, another farmer from the village, is equally despondent. "I have three daughters of marriageable age. But there is no way I can marry them off," he says.

The problem of plenty was echoed in Punjab, where the Rs 100 storing charges exceeded the Rs 80 a quintal of potato could fetch in the market. If potato farmers have been pushed to the brink in Punjab and Uttar Pradesh due to a bumper harvest, cultivators of pulses in Gujarat and Rajasthan are in a fix because three successive droughts have played havoc with their crops. Of the 41,528 villages in Rajasthan, 30,583 were declared scarcity-hit this year. Pulses, which require more water, are the worst affected, with productivity declining from 594 kg per hectare in 1997-98 to 364 kg in 1999-2000. Gram output fell from 869 kg per hectare in 1997-98 to 695 kg per hectare in 1999-2000.

FALLING PRODUCTION
 

 
All figures are in million tonnes  
 
 
* Castorseed, sesamum, nigerseed, sunflower, linseed and safflower  

While productivity has dipped, the input costs have shot up. The mustard he grew on his 18 hectares in Jaipur district of Rajasthan fetched Jagdish Chaudhary a profit of almost Rs 1.25 lakh 10 years ago. Today, he can hardly make Rs 25,000 out of it. "I have not been able to add even a brick to my property since 1991,'' he says.

Om Prakash, who grows tomatoes on his three hectares in Jaipur district in Rajasthan, is in deeper waters. His family had bought a tractor in 1997 after a good crop that year. The crop was good this year too but prices of tomatoes have crashed to Rs 4 a kg. With his annual income down from Rs 50,000 to Rs 15,000,
Om Prakash is scrounging to pay the instalment on his tractor.


 

 
 
 
Care Today
     METRO TODAY
 
   

MetroScape
Charitable Mood
In the backdrop of murky allegations about underworld connections, philanthropy by the Bollywood badshahs comes a little more easily.
more...

Looking Glass

Delhi: Lifestyle Store

Delhi: Film Festival

Mumbai: Restaurant

 

 
    Web Exclusives
DESPATCHES
 

The Indian Navy's International Fleet Review was a fine effort at naval diplomacy which the Government would do well to build on, writes INDIA TODAY's Principal Correspondent Sandeep Unnithan
in Despatches.

 

 
 
INTERVIEWS
 

"The only obvious competition is in bhangra," say the Pakistani duo of the music group, Strings, in an exclusive interview with INDIA TODAY's Sonia Faleiro.
Interviews.

 

 

 

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