People's Democracy(Weekly Organ of the Communist Party of India (Marxist) |
Vol.
XXX
No. 09 February 26, 2006 |
Following
is the text of the resolution adopted by the 31st all India conference of the
All India Kisan Sabha (AIKS) held recently in Nasik, Maharashtra. A copy of the
resolution has been sent to the union finance minister, P Chidambaram by AIKS
president S Ramachandran Pillai and AIKS general secretary, K Varadarajan asking
him to take into consideration the aspects raised in the resolution while
formulating the budget.
THE
UPA government has established a National Commission on Farmers under the
chairmanship of Dr M S Swaminathan. The commission has now submitted three
reports to the Government of India, and in them has made a range of important
recommendations to the government.
The
31st all India conference of the All India Kisan Sabha notes that the first
report was submitted in December 2004, the second in early August 2005, and the
third in December 2005 in the expectation that there would be adequate time for
the Government of India to examine the suggestions for appropriate financial
support in the budget for 2006-07.
It is an illustration of the absence of political will that instead of
responding to the urgent need to mitigate the deep-rooted crisis in agriculture
and distress of the peasantry, as witnessed unprecedentedly in independent
India, the Government of India decided to kill time by setting up another
Committee on Agriculture in the National Development Council under the
chairmanship of the union minister for agriculture, Sharad Pawar. The committee,
in a futile, repetitive exercise, set up six Working Groups on issues identical
to those covered by the commission. The manner in which the committee has begun
to function indicates that it will take no less than a year for its report to be
finalised.
The
31st all India conference of the All India Kisan Sabha points out that the
reports of the National Commission on Farmers covers almost all issues
concerning agriculture in India, and that it is rich in the technical details of
agricultural science and technology.
This
conference notes that there are many recommendations of the commission with
which we are in agreement, and which the Conference endorses. They include the
following:
(1) The government should institute a fund on the
lines of calamity funds to assist farmers affected by crop losses.
(2) The rate of interest on loans should be
reduced to four per cent simple interest. Compound interest should not be
charged on arrears. Interest on loans in areas hit by drought, flood and heavy
pest infestation should be waived.
(3) Crop insurance should be expanded to cover
the entire country and all crops.
(4) The government should create a fund to
stabilise price fluctuations.
(5) Introduce
quantitative restrictions on the import of agricultural commodities.
(6) The government should undertake a census of
farmers suicides in order to gain a proper understanding and assessment of
relief measures.
(7) The government should undertake an all India
Debt Survey.
(8) The government should form state-level
Farmers Commisssions in order to ensure immediate response to farmers problems.
In
addition, the conference endorses the following list of recommendations of the
National Commission on Farmers, which include a comprehensive set of immediate
relief measures for addressing the rural distress:
(1)
Recommendation that agricultural planning be organised on a
watershed-basis.
(2) Steps suggested to increase irrigated area
and other measures, such as the implementation of a Million Wells Recharge
Programme.
(3) Establishment
of a National Land Use Advisory Service, linked to State and Block Level Use
Advisory Services.
(4) Establishment
of a network of advanced soil
testing laboratories.
(5) Establishment
of about 50,000 farm schools for the purpose of farmer-to-farmer learning.
(6) Initiation of a
National Horticulture Mission for capacity building in post harvest technology.
(7) Steps to specially promote dryland farming
(8) Organisation of
Small Holders Horticulture Estates.
(9) Integration of
all crop-wise technology Missions.
(10) Credit reform including an enhancement of the total
amount available for farm loans and a reduction in interest rates.
(11) Establishing an
Indian Trade Organisation (ITO) and our own boxes for domestic agricultural
support on the model of WTO’s Blue, Green and Amber Boxes.
(12) Cataloguing of
indigenous varieties of different crops to prevent biopiracy.
(13) Promotion of
organic farming.
(14) Establishment
of Village Knowledge Centres to promote the use of ICT (Information and
Communication Technology) in agriculture.
(15) Suggestion to
transform “microfinance to livelihood finance,”
i.e, the use of SHGs (Self Help Groups) in agriculture and the formalisation of
their forward and backward linkages.
(16) Emphasis on the
revitalisation and democratisation of co-operatives.
(17) Suggestion to
revamp the crop insurance system by making it more farmer friendly and reducing
premiums.
(18) Careful use of
biotechnology in agriculture (we note for instance observation such as the
following Biotechnology can help, but only if it is pro-poor, pro-women and
pro-environment.) The public sector must come up with competitive Bt cotton
hybrids so as to lower the seed cost and benefit resource poor farmers and
insurance should be introduced along with GM seed sale.
(19) Improvement in
the implementation and expansion of the Minimum Support Price system to more
crops. There is need for a much stronger protection of MSP in different regions
of the country for all commodities.
(20) Making
regulated markets efficient and establishing more rural periodic markets.
(21) Need to reform age-old marketing laws so as to
reduce transaction costs for farmers.
(22) Emphasis on the
reduction of transport costs of agricultural commodities across the country.
(23) Emphasis to
raise the investment in agricultural research to at least one per cent of the
agricultural GDP.
The
“Composite Financial Summary” of the two reports added together (Rs 3496
crore + Rs 8337 crore) amounts to Rs 11,833 crore (the third Report does not
provide any) excluding the cost of certain items recommended, including those of
the ‘composite Administrative Initiative’ which are yet to be worked out.
Considering that even this amount will not substantially change the investments
in agriculture and allied sector in terms of percentage of GNP and total
budgetary outlay of the central government, the 31st conference of AIKS demands
from the government:
·
This total amount of Rs 11,833 crore be provided in the union budget,
2006-07, in addition to what is provided already.
·
The reports of the National Commission on Farmers must form the basis for
the deliberations of the Committee on Agriculture established by the National
Development Council; and that the recommendations listed above be implemented.