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LATEST NEWS UPDATES | A fresh perspective on farm suicides -A Srinivas

A fresh perspective on farm suicides -A Srinivas

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published Published on Aug 16, 2017   modified Modified on Aug 16, 2017
-The Hindu Business Line

A recent book shows how a cocktail of indebtedness, masculinity and consumerism acts as a trigger.

For those who have wondered whether indebtedness can be the sole factor driving farmers to take their lives, here is a book that introduces much needed nuance and complexity to the debate. Nilotpal Kumar’s book, based on a study of 22 suicide cases in Ananthapur district (accompanied by a fascinating ethnographic study of a village which he uses as his control group) argues that while the economic crisis in agriculture is a significant factor, the role of other socio-cultural forces should not be discounted. The book does not underplay the agrarian economic crisis. By according due importance to the economic, social, and cultural, and by projecting the crisis as a multi-layered one, the book steers clear of becoming a fanciful, post-modernist tract — which its title ‘egotism and masculinity in peasant life’ may inadvertently end up conveying.

Farming in Anantapur

Anantapur district, historically an agriculturally backward region, has seen more “farmers’ suicides” (a terminology that links farming to economic causes) than other regions in Andhra Pradesh — a State which along with Karnataka, Maharashtra and Gujarat have recorded more suicides than elsewhere. Its crisis is linked to the unviability of groundnut cultivation on dry land “even in a normal monsoon year”. It is remarkable that monocropping of groundnut, or rather, commoditised farming as opposed to growth of cereals, has been a feature of Anantapur since the British days.

Reduced pest-resistance has impacted yields, hurting small farmers all the more. When the Government began promoting horticulture, stressed small farmers took to it as well, showing no ‘risk-aversion’ whatsoever – hence, migrating out of farming to urban jobs does not seem to have been exercised as an option, as in other distress-hit areas.

However, citrus farming required investing in borewells, which is nothing short of a gamble. Citrus farms take five years to break even, but the returns thereafter seem to be good enough to spur the risk-takers, whether large, medium or small farmers. The “per acre gross returns from citrus is at least 60-70 per cent higher than those that most profitable farms obtain from double-cropped high yield groundnut, not to speak of dry groundnut crop.”

Interestingly, the book argues, informal credit has not been a singularly oppressive force for peasants — rates in the region of 18-24 per cent cannot be termed usurious. This marks a break from the existing assumptions on this subject. However, it becomes difficult for small farmers to bear higher investments costs per acre. A “precarious groundwater regime” also punishes small and marginal farmers who entered the citrus game after the rest.

The borewell rush began after 2000. While “widening access to landownership in recent decades has intensified the rush for groundwater, it is the owners of middle and large holdings who have benefited the most in the process.” Given that the “share of expenditure on failed borewell attempts ranged between 30 to 48 per cent of all capital expenditure”, and that “the failed attempts are three time as high as successful ones” it is only natural that the smaller farmers are more vulnerable, even as some of them manage to strike it rich.

Therefore, for Anantapur district as a whole, farmers owning less than five acres account for over half the suicide cases, while those holding between five and 10 acres account for another third. A caste-wise break-up shows that both the dominant agriculturists and the other backward caste Kurubas account for a large share of suicides, “preponderantly male”.

The book rightly points out that with higher public investment in irrigation and a better seed support and extension network for horticulture, this mess could have been averted. It also underscores the high stakes game that commodified agriculture has become in a globalised environment.

Please click here to read more.


The Hindu Business Line, 13 August, 2017, http://www.thehindubusinessline.com/opinion/books/a-srinivas-reviews-unravelling-farmer-suicies-by-nilotpal-kumar/article9816426.ece


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