Some Notes On The Current Agrarian Scenario:, XXVII 1-2, January-June 2011
Some Notes On The Current Agrarian Scenario:, XXVII 1-2, January-June 2011
Some Notes On The Current Agrarian Scenario:, XXVII 1-2, January-June 2011
VENKATESH ATHREYA
5. However, with all this, the agrarian economy has seen pockets
of growth in terms of classes, crops and regions. It is of course difficult,
in the absence of reliable data at disaggregated levels, to bring out in
detail the variations across both time and space. Enough evidence has
emerged from the PARI studies and some others to suggest that, along
with pauperization and immiserisation, differentiation has also been
a continuing feature of the agrarian economy. To say this is not to
minimize the enormity of rural deprivation or ignore the fact of huge
agrarian distress leading to farmers suicides on a massive scale.
6. It is important to keep in mind that the agrarian or rural
economy is now linked to the non-agrarian and non-rural sectors to
a far greater extent than was the case decades ago. To the extent that
there has been some growth of productive forces in the rest of the
economy, it is bound to have some impact on the agrarian and rural
economy as well. Even along side predatory forms of accumulation,
there has been generation of surplus in the economy and its partial
investment in productive activities. Domination by finance capital
over policy making cannot be understood to mean the absence of
growth of productive forces and of all capitalist accumulation.
7. Let me now move on to some aspects which have been
mentioned in the Note by VKR but not dealt with in detail. I shall
91
THE MARXIST
THE MARXIST
THE MARXIST
NOTES
1
Vijoo Krishnan, Fertiliser Policy, Soil Degradation & Ruin of the Peasantry, unpublished
paper.
2 For instance, the price of urea varied from about $70 per tonne in July-December 1998 to
$865 in July-September 2008. The coefficient of variation was quite high (63.5%) between
1990 and 2008. The average free on board (fob) price during the decade of 1990s was $135
and it increased significantly ($260/tonne) during the 2000s. See Sharma and Thaker,
Fertiliser Subsidies in India: Who are the real beneficiaries?, Economic and Political Weekly,
March 20, 2010.
3 See Sharma and Thaker, Fertiliser Subsidies in India.
4 Ibid.
5 Vijoo Krishnan, loc cit.
96