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The Vice President a few months back had advised top priority and coordinated action by both the Centre and the states to bring in reforms. He suggested that the 4 Ps – Parliament, political leaders, policymakers and press – must proactively adopt a positive bias towards agriculture.
Observing that many people are leaving agriculture and migrating to urban areas because of rising input costs and unfavourable market conditions, he said the problems that are holding back Indian farmers from realizing their full potential must be identified and solved.
India Agriculture: A backgrounder
While agriculture’s share in India’s economy has progressively declined to less than 15% due to the high growth rates of the industrial and services sectors, the sector’s importance in India’s economic and social fabric goes well beyond this indicator as:
India is a global agricultural powerhouse. It is the world’s largest producer of milk, pulses, and spices, and has the world’s largest cattle herd (buffaloes), as well as the largest area under wheat, rice and cotton.
It is the second-largest producer of rice, wheat, cotton, sugarcane, farmed fish, sheep & goat meat, fruit, vegetables and tea.
Challenges to Indian Agriculture
Three agriculture sector challenges will be important to India’s overall development and the improved welfare of its rural poor:
[1] Raising agricultural productivity per unit of land
[2] Reducing rural poverty
[3] Food security needs
Ground challenges
[a] Small and Fragmented Land Holdings:
[b] Quality seeds
[c] Manures, Fertilizers and Biocides
[d] Irrigation challenges
[e] Lack of Mechanization
Priority Areas for Support
[A] Enhancing agricultural productivity, competitiveness, and rural growth
(1) Promoting new technologies and reforming agricultural research and extension:
(2) Improving Water Resources and Irrigation/Drainage Management
(3) Facilitating crop diversification to higher-value commodities
(4) Promoting high growth commodities
(5) Developing markets, agricultural credit and public expenditures
[B] Poverty alleviation and community actions
[C] Sustaining the environment and future agricultural productivity
(1) Over-use management
(2) Climate change mitigation
[D] Marketing reforms
Various govt initiatives
The Government of India has taken several steps which include:
Conclusion
By: VISHAL GOYAL ProfileResourcesReport error
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