Agriculture = poverty? Is PM right?

GN Bureau | September 8, 2010



Like much of the rest of the world, India has chosen the industrialisation path to progress, at the cost of agriculture. This trend has only accentuated since 1991, when Manohan Singh became the finance minister. On Monday, interacting with a group of editors, he stressed this approach and said: "The only way we can raise our heads above poverty is for more people to be taken out of agriculture."

In India, while manufacturing and services have been notching up very high growth rates, agriculture is stagnating or even declining. Industrialisation has led many western nations to prosperity, but is it the right prescription for India, which was (and to an extent remains) primarily an agrarian economy?

The prime minister’s latest remarks show where agriculture figure in the policy agenda – when food prices, food security and malnutrition among children are burning issues. When more people will be taken out of agriculture, they can expect no more than lowly jobs in factories that came up on agriculture land.

To remove poverty, does India need a renewed focus on agriculture? Is Gandhi’s small-is-beautiful, localised economy the right way for us? Or is there a middle way of calibrated industrialisation?
 

Comments

 

Other News

In Varanasi, fringe expansion vs. core heritage

For centuries, the urban framework of Varanasi was defined not just by its relationship with the sacred Ganga but by its multifaceted network of urban commons. Historic kunds, seasonal talabs (ponds), and open maidans served as the city’s basic ecological infrastructure. Th

What ails India`s skill development ecosystem

India’s skill development programmes were designed with a goal to make the young population ready with market-required skills and competencies, and to provide them with better employment opportunities. Yet the outcomes have fallen short of that goal: though over 1.6 crore individuals were trained acr

Cabinet passes resolution applauding PM on term record

The Union Cabinet on Wednesday passed a resolution marking June 10, 2026, as a historic milestone in the journey of Indian democracy applauding Narendra Modi for becoming the longest-serving elected PM of the country. By establishing a record of 4,399 days of continuous service as an elected PM, he has s

Testing the teachers, moving the goalposts

A teacher was appointed in 1999, before the Right to Education (RTE) Act came into force, and appointed under the rules that existed at that time. She gave the necessary test, passed it, passed the interview, and was appointed. Over the next 26 years, she taught thousands of children, faced transfer orde

`Focus on infra, reforms, digital connectivity has created strong foundation for growth`

In a step towards the operationalisation of the Bharat Audyogik Vikas Yojana (BHAVYA), union minister of commerce & industry Piyush Goyal launched the BHAVYA Portal on Monday in New Delhi.   Addressing the gathering, Goyal said that the BHAVYA scheme will adopt a competit

Govt, RBI announce major reforms to attract FPI

The finance ministry on Friday announced a series of measures aimed at enhancing the ease of investment for individual Persons Resident Outside India (PROIs) and Foreign Portfolio Investors (FPIs), and to attract stable long-term foreign capital flows.   Building on the recent in





Archives

Current Issue

Opinion

Facebook Twitter Google Plus Linkedin Subscribe Newsletter

Twitter