Here I quote extensively from various sources..
Outlook
Bringing the spotlight back to agriculture is, in fact, what has made YSR's chief ministership exemplary. Making irrigation a priority, his government allocated it Rs 3,350 crore in 2004-05, Rs 6,350 crore in the next fiscal, and Rs 10,040 crore for '06-07. It plans to spend Rs 46,000 crore in all. In a state where no new irrigation project was taken up for a decade, YSR has taken up 26 medium and major projects, of which eight are scheduled to be completed in two years. "Even my cabinet colleagues expressed doubts on how I'd mobilise the funds, but I stood firm," he says. Thanks to that, AP is a farmers' domain yet again.
And YSR's government is claiming all the credit. Says finance minister K. Rosaiah: "Of course, it helped that nature blessed us with bountiful rain, but it is the Congress which has helped make agriculture a remunerative profession again." He notes how states like Maharashtra and Punjab have been unable to provide free power, but YSR continues with his seven-hour free power supply to farmers. Further, his waiver of Rs 1,287 crore of power dues has done its bit to curb distress suicides. Farmer lending through the cooperative sector too has tripled to Rs 2,000 crore.
Another area YSR wielded his magic wand in is Bt cotton, cultivated statewide. Monsanto Mahyco Biotec Ltd, the main player supplying these genetically modified seeds, was charging Rs 1,850 for 450-gm packets, of which Rs 1,250 was royalty alone. This when it charges Rs 45 as royalty per sachet in China and Rs 108 in the US. Each acre needs up to two sachets. Monsanto's high rates led to numerous companies selling spurious seeds, at a third of Monsanto's rate: Rs 600 per sachet. The lure proved to be fatal: it was the main reason behind farmer suicides in 2003-04.
This January, the YSR government filed a pil on behalf of the farmers and saw to it that MNCs like Monsanto were indicted by the MRTPC for violation of anti-trust laws in the country and for adopting restrictive trade practices and charging unreasonable royalty. Then, on May 11, MRTPC granted an injunction against the companies, directing them to charge reasonable royalty. Now, the price of Bt cotton seeds cannot exceed Rs 900 for a packet. The belated move has helped check farmer suicides considerably although farmers caught in the debt trap continue to take their lives.
The Congress government, though, is far from antagonistic to what Naidu genuinely initiated. He has built on the growth Naidu generated in the IT sector—if Rosaiah is to be believed, the growth in IT & ITES has been 68 per cent. MNCs too continue to find Hyderabad a cheaper alternative to Bangalore. Industrial power tariff was slashed by 4.1 per cent in 2005-06, and by another 3.8 per cent in '06-07. Coupled with the promotion of SEZs linked to the ports at Visakhapatnam, Kakinada and Krishnapatnam, industrial houses are being drawn to Andhra Pradesh.
The Indiramma scheme is another instrument through which the CM has tried to improve the lot of the poor by building houses for them. "We've built 12 lakh houses in two years and 60 lakh more will be built in the coming years," says YSR. "What's more, we don't talk of SC, BC or forward caste here. If after 50 years of Independence, a family does not have a house, there can be nothing more tragic, caste notwithstanding."
Indian Express.. Nov 23, http://www.indianexpress.com/story/17136.html
YAVATMAL, ADILABAD, NOVEMBER 22: The distance from Yavatmal in Maharashtra’s Vidarbha to Adilabad in Andhra Pradesh is barely 100 km — one river and two bridges is all that one needs to cross from one town in India’s richest cotton belt to another. But it’s almost a million miles apart.
While Yavatmal tops the list for farmers’ suicides with 222 this year, Adilabad has had only two. In 2003-04, when Andhra reported as many as 4000 suicides, Adilabad had recorded 300 coming down to 17 last year.
That’s why this journey holds valuable lessons for policy-makers battling to break the debt-death cycle in Vidarbha. And nothing illustrates the difference better than Polambari, a scheme launched by the Andhra government a year ago. Under this, “field schools” for farmers are conducted by trained officers. And more than what they teach, it’s just their presence that, farmers say, is key to the turn-around. Along with a range of related policy interventions (see box).
In sharp contrast, in all the six districts of Vidarbha — where average landholding of 7 acres is similar to the pattern in Adilabad — almost half of all Agriculture Research Officer positions are vacant. Even those who are employed are virtually invisible: staff have neither the funds nor the willingness to travel to the fields leaving farmers to the mercy of aggressive marketing by seed companies, moneylenders and with zero advice on pests, disease or new farm techniques.
In fact, the Rs 4.5 crore sanctioned to strengthen such agriculture extension services, under the Prime Minister’s relief package, is yet to be utilized.
To understand the difference this makes, consider this: Andhra farmers were notorious for their indiscriminate use of pesticide —spending as much as Rs 10,000 per acre, spraying as much as 10-15 times, not only increasing cost several fold but also reducing soil productivity.
This year, the cotton crop is good and most farmers are making a neat profit. If nature played a role, there was nurture as well. Thanks to classes at the field schools, pesticide control has been hammered into a new precept.
The results are visible: Adilabad’s pesticide sale, of mainly Monochrotophos and Endosulfan, has come down from 70 tonnes a year to 18 tonnes. One reason is Bt cotton which now covers 100% of the total cotton fields in Andhra Pradesh (only 60% of the Vidarbha crop is Bt and its yield this year has been less than expected). But key to Andhra’s solution is the close, regular interaction between farmers and state extension officers.
Take Adilabad’s Rampur village early one morning this week. About 30 farmers gather around Agriculture Officer V Veeraiah who is all set with books, charts, papers and crayons to explain how to cut costs in the nine months his students have to tends to cotton fields.
They have chosen a two-acre field as a classroom, on one acre he demonstrates how certain techniques can be employed to reduce costs without compromising yields. The other acre is left as a control group, for conventional farming to compare and contrast.
“The basic aim is to save friendly insects who do the job of killing other pests,” Veeraiah tells the farmers as he shows them how to use simple kits to test level of nutrients in the soil and identify which ones need to be supplemented.
Veeraiah also helps the farmer change certain age-old practices like applying phosphoric fertilizer later and not during the time of sowing. He shows them how to apply Monochrotophos only on the stem with a brush for sucking pests, not on the entire plant. This, he explains, causes the least damage to the environment and does not kill insects like the praying mantis which actually eat some of the dangerous pests. He even gets farmers to take turns drawing sketches of the pests and identifying each in the local language.
The “classroom” field belongs to young farmer Srinivas Reddy who owns seven acres. He proudly claims he is making a neat profit of Rs 35,000 per acre this year. The first pickings are done and have been sold in the Adilabad mandi, incidentally the largest in Asia.
Among Veeraiah’s students is fresher Dayakar Reddy who admits he was initially sceptical but now swears by these classes. His costs are down to Rs 2,800 per acre minus the picking cost, which is a third of what it is in neighbouring Yavatmal.
Veeraiah admits that more such schools are needed, he can only select two villages in his mandal for the entire season lasting 14 weeks. The rest, he depends on word of mouth. Next year, the best farmers from the present batch will travel to other villages to spread the word. Maybe some of them — or their lessons, at least — can take that 100-km journey to Yavatmal.
What Adilabad is doing right
• Improved Extension services that ensure constant interaction between farmers and officers
• Concerted crackdown on moneylenders
• Farmers already compensated for damage caused by heavy rains in August
• Subsidy on micronutrients like magnesium and zinc
• Increased cropping of soyabean by 30% to break the monocrop cycle of cotton
(to be contd)
2 comments:
shashank,
except for the increased concentration on agricultural extension..there is no other factor that can actually be attributed to the ysr regime.. subsidies on power and inputs were more during the chandrababu period. as the outlook report acknowledges it was certain 'foundations' laid during the naidu regime, like in the power sector, which are making things easier for ysr now.. overall, i'd rate him much lower in governance & investment than naidu..
I am not denying the fact.. nor is YSR denying the fact that they are not building on the foundation laid by CBN's govt. Power sector reforms were the best thing to happen in the last 9+ yrs. But the truth remains that agriculture was put on backburner during the previous regime. And AP farmers needed that thrust and assurance from the govt that even they could live.
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