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Trust Deficit - Changes to Farm Laws

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December 05, 2020

Related articles: Farm Reform Laws; Farm Reform Laws - Concerns;

What is the issue?

  • Heeding to the demands of the farmers, after the talks, the Centre has offered to make some changes to the farm laws.
  • However, some long-standing demands and the changes much needed remain unaddressed.

What is the recent development?

  • After dismissing the protests as ill-informed and motivated initially, the Centre has offered to make some changes to the laws.
  • But the farmers have now called for a Bharat Bandh.
  • Farmers who are protesting are sceptical of the government's claim that these laws would make agriculture more lucrative and secure by allowing market forces to play.
  • There is a fear that the new regime will dismantle the system of procurement under MSP and leave farmers at the mercy of corporations.

What commitments has the Centre made now?

  • Responding to the concerns, the Centre has suggested -
    1. safeguards to prevent land alienation via contract farming
    2. strengthening the State-run mandi system
    3. ensuring mandi system's equal footing with private buyers through equalising taxes
    4. allowing grievance redress in civil courts rather than just in the offices of Sub-Divisional Magistrates
    5. ensuring proper verification of private traders

What are the unaddressed concerns?

  • The Centre has not offered a legal guarantee of MSP.
  • The question of power subsidies remains contentious.
  • The present government has a declared policy of ensuring farm prices that are at least 50% more than the input costs.
  • But this has remained more an intent than reality.
  • The discussion has also been disturbed by the government’s refusal to include rental value of the land in input costs.

Why are farmers concerned?

  • India had ensured substantial food stock and a robust distribution mechanism that covers the entire country.
  • But agriculture has to remain environmentally sustainable and remunerative for farmers.
  • Significant challenges have now emerged with regard to these benchmarks.
  • There have been changes in land acquisition laws and there is general thrust towards industrialisation.
  • These, together with the pressure on agriculture subsidies, have increased the feeling of vulnerability of farmers in recent years.
  • The abrupt changes in the sector brought in through the three laws have aggravated the trust deficit of the government.

What is the way forward?

  • Food security is considered a component of national security by all countries.
  • Apart from the fresh amendments, the Centre must consider a legal guarantee for MSP.
  • The incentive structures and cropping pattern has to be reworked in order to account for changes in water availability and changing dietary requirements.
  • The Centre must strive for reaching an agreement with the farmers that addresses their concerns.

 

Source: The Hindu

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