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This Article is From Jan 28, 2019

Farm Sector Requires More Than Just Money From Budget 2019, Say Experts

Farm Sector Requires More Than Just Money From Budget 2019, Say Experts
Workers unload sugarcane tops at a cattle shelter in Beed district, Maharashtra, India. (Photographer: Dhiraj Singh/Bloomberg)  

In a year of already failing rain and declarations of impending drought, government data on the crisis-ridden agriculture sector that sustains more than 600 million Indians--or half the population--appears to reveal ever-increasing spending.

India's agriculture budget doubled over five years to Rs 57,600 crore in 2018-19 under the National Democratic Alliance government, three times that of the last United Progressive Alliance government budget in 2013-14, with the highest increase of 79 percent over the previous year coming in 2016-17. As a proportion of the total budget, however, the NDA's allocations for agriculture were largely static, at an average of 2 percent over the past four years, rising from an average of 1.3 percent during the second term of the UPA, according to an IndiaSpend analysis of budgetary data. In 2018-19, it rose 2.3 percent over the previous year.

Agriculture generates only 18 percent of gross domestic product but sustains 600 million people--half of India's population. Nearly 69 percent, or 833 million Indians--most of them poor--live in rural areas. Agriculture is thus likely to receive extra attention in the NDA's last budget before the next general elections in April-May, especially after the Bharatiya Janata Party, which leads the NDA government, lost three Hindi-heartland states--Rajasthan, Madhya Pradesh and Chhattisgarh--in assembly elections in December 2018.

Commentators have said farm distress was a factor in these electoral reverses. In November 2018, protests by more than 200 farmer groups demanded better prices for produce and “freedom from debt”. It is thus likely the government's interim budget before the general elections will include a relief package for farmers.

With the NDA promising to double farm incomes by 2022, the budget's priorities should be--experts told us--more money and more research for agriculture and public investment.

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