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The root cause of the agriculture crisis April 17, 2008 Countless trees have been sacrificed in the last three weeks discussing the agriculture loan waiver in print. With all due respect to the many learned government spokespersons and other supporters of the measure as well as its equally eloquent critics, I would like to submit that indebtedness is not the heart of the problem of agriculture in India. It is perhaps the most visible symptom of it, but the real malady lies elsewhere. The root cause of the crisis is the income-deficit of the sector. This may sound too simple, or even simplistic, but most seemingly complex situations do have a simple causation at their core. The term income-deficit needs clarification. At a basic level, it means that the income derived from the activity is not sufficient to meet the consumption needs of the recipient. The point to note is that most agriculturists, and not just those below the poverty line, believe that their income does not allow them to live in what they consider to be a minimum acceptable manner. Their response then is something all economists and accountants warn against: mixing stocks and flows, using assets to meet consumption needs. Indian farmers are hardly alone in this behaviour. Native American Indians sold their land at throwaway prices to white settlers to pay for the blankets, pots and pans, and firewater. The distinction between borrowings from institutions and private lenders is to an extent pointless, because most rural families borrow from both. Similarly, a distinction between loans for cultivation and asset creation, or in cash and kind is also somewhat redundant, because there is a great deal of fungibility in these transactions. The government response has ranged from reducing or deferring interest, rescheduling, extending, and twice in the last 20 years, waiving the overdues. These measures have invariably acted as palliatives, with the problem recurring periodically and almost predictably, with a greater magnitude each time. One could argue that institutional loans do make allowances for consumption needs. If there is lower income in an adverse year, there would be compensatory increases in a good year and loan and repayments are based on averages. Therefore, defaults or overdues in one period could be made good potentially in another, presumably good, period. Reality works differently. Certainly farmers have no ability to meet their repayment obligations in a bad year. But the surpluses in good years do not wholly compensate for these shortages. Deferred consumption expenses, even rites and ceremonies, take priority and the income surplus diminishes or vanishes altogether, without any attribution of malafides. The problem of income deficit arises from three basic causes: first, adverse terms of trade (which means farmers pay more in real exchange terms for the goods and services they buy than what they get for those that they sell); second, low productivity of resources engaged in agriculture, and third and possibly most important, the disproportionately large dependence of population on agriculture for its livelihood. This is the first in a three-part series on Indian agriculture Also read: "What is food crisis?" Powered by More Guest Columns | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||