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Agriculture in India

The history of agriculture in India dates back to the Neolithic period. India ranks second worldwide in farm outputs. As per the Indian economic survey 2020 -21, agriculture employed more than 50% of the Indian workforce and contributed 20.2% to the country's GDP.[1]

Development of agricultural output of India in 2015 US$
Share of labour force employed in agriculture in India

In 2016, agriculture and allied sectors like animal husbandry, forestry and fisheries accounted for 17.5% of the GDP (gross domestic product) with about 41.49% of the workforce in 2020.[2][3][4][5] India ranks first in the world with highest net cropped area followed by US and China.[6] The economic contribution of agriculture to India's GDP is steadily declining with the country's broad-based economic growth. Still, agriculture is demographically the broadest economic sector and plays a significant role in the overall socio-economic fabric of India.

The total agriculture commodities export was US$3.50 billion in March - June 2020. India exported $38 billion worth of agricultural products in 2013, making it the seventh-largest agricultural exporter worldwide and the sixth largest net exporter.[7] Most of its agriculture exports serve developing and least developed nations.[7] Indian agricultural/horticultural and processed foods are exported to more than 120 countries, primarily to the Japan, Southeast Asia, SAARC countries, the European Union and the United States.[8][9]

Definition of farmer edit

Indian farmers are people who grow crops as a profession.[10] Various government estimates (Census, Agricultural Census, National Sample Survey assessments, and Periodic Labour Force Surveys) give a different number of farmers in the country ranging from 37 million to 118 million as per the different definitions.[11] Some definitions take in to account the number of holdings as compared to the number of farmers.[11] Other definitions take into account possession of land, while others try to delink land ownership from the definition of a farmer.[12] Other terms also used include 'cultivator'.[12]

India's National Policy for Farmers 2007 defines farmer as:[10]

For the purpose of this Policy, the term “FARMER” will refer to a person actively engaged in the economic and/or livelihood activity of growing crops and producing other primary agricultural commodities and will include all agricultural operational holders, cultivators, agricultural labourers, sharecroppers, tenants, poultry and livestock rearers, fishers, beekeepers, gardeners, pastoralists, non-corporate planters and planting labourers, as well as persons engaged in various farmingrelated occupations such as sericulture, vermiculture, and agro-forestry. The term will also include tribal families / persons engaged in shifting cultivation and in the collection, use and sale of timber and non-timber forest produce.

However this definition has not been adopted.[10]

Overview edit

 
 
 
 
Threshing, cotton picking, rice farming and tea leaf plucking
 
Worldwide employment In agriculture, forestry and fishing in 2021. India has one of the highest number of people employed in these sectors.

As per the 2014 FAO world agriculture statistics India is the world's largest producer of many fresh fruits like banana, mango, guava, papaya, lemon and vegetables like chickpea, okra and milk, major spices like chili pepper, ginger, fibrous crops such as jute, staples such as millets and castor oil seed. India is the second largest producer of wheat and rice, the world's major food staples.[13]

India is currently the world's second largest producer of several dry fruits, agriculture-based textile raw materials, roots and tuber crops, pulses, farmed fish, eggs, coconut, sugarcane and numerous vegetables. India is ranked under the world's five largest producers of over 80% of agricultural produce items, including many cash crops such as coffee and cotton, in 2010.[13] India is one of the world's five largest producers of livestock and poultry meat, with one of the fastest growth rates, as of 2011.[14]

One report from 2008 claimed that India's population is growing faster than its ability to produce rice and wheat.[15] While other recent studies claim that India can easily feed its growing population, plus produce wheat and rice for global exports, if it can reduce food staple spoilage/wastage, improve its infrastructure and raise its farm productivity like those achieved by other developing countries such as Brazil and China.[16][17]

In fiscal year ending June 2011, with a normal monsoon season, Indian agriculture accomplished an all-time record production of 85.9 million tonnes of wheat, a 6.4% increase from a year earlier. Rice output in India hit a new record at 95.3 million tonnes, a 7% increase from the year earlier.[18] Lentils and many other food staples production also increased year over year. Indian farmers, thus produced about 71 kilograms of wheat and 80 kilograms of rice for every member of Indian population in 2011. The per capita supply of rice every year in India is now higher than the per capita consumption of rice every year in Japan.[19]

India exported $39 billion worth of agricultural products in 2013, making it the seventh largest agricultural exporter worldwide, and the sixth largest net exporter.[7] This represents explosive growth, as in 2004 net exports were about $5 billion.[7] India is the fastest growing exporter of agricultural products over a 10-year period, its $39 billion of net export is more than double the combined exports of the European Union (EU-28).[7] It has become one of the world's largest supplier of rice, cotton, sugar and wheat. India exported around 2 million metric tonnes of wheat and 2.1 million metric tonnes of rice in 2011 to Africa, Nepal, Bangladesh and other regions around the world.[18]

Aquaculture and catch fishery is amongst the fastest growing industries in India. Between 1990 and 2010, the Indian fish capture harvest doubled, while aquaculture harvest tripled. In 2008, India was the world's sixth largest producer of marine and freshwater capture fisheries and the second largest aquaculture farmed fish producer. India exported 600,000 metric tonnes of fish products to nearly half of the world's countries.[20][21][22] Though the available nutritional standard is 100% of the requirement, India lags far behind in terms of quality protein intake at 20% which is to be tackled by making available protein rich food products such as eggs, meat, fish, chicken etc. at affordable prices[23]

India has shown a steady average nationwide annual increase in the mass-produced per hectare for some agricultural items, over the last 60 years. These gains have come mainly from India's green revolution, improving road and power generation infrastructure, knowledge of gains and reforms.[24] Despite these recent accomplishments, agriculture has the potential for major productivity and total output gains, because crop yields in India are still just 30% to 60% of the best sustainable crop yields achievable in the farms of developed and other developing countries.[25] Additionally, post harvest losses due to poor infrastructure and unorganised retail, caused India to experience some of the highest food losses in the world.[26][27]

 
Kurmi farmers of rural Bihar have started using modern agriculture technology

One of India's major agricultural products, rice, is suffering as a result of shifting monsoon patterns. States in the East and Northeast of the country (Uttar Pradesh, Bihar, and Odisha), have experienced high temperatures and insufficient rainfall in 2022, in contrast to Central and Southern India, which has experienced excessive rain in recent months, resulting in flooding in the Southern states of Kerala, Karnataka, and Madhya Pradesh.[28][29][30]

The rice crop this season is therefore anticipated to decrease by roughly 6.77 million tonnes to 104.99 million, according to India's ministry of agriculture.[28][30]

History edit

Vedic literature provides some of the earliest written record of agriculture in India. Rigveda hymns, for example, describes ploughing, fallowing, irrigation, fruit and vegetable cultivation. Other historical evidence suggests rice and cotton were cultivated in the Indus Valley, and ploughing patterns from the Bronze Age have been excavated at Kalibangan in Rajasthan.[31] Bhumivargaha, an Indian Sanskrit text, suggested to be 2500 years old, classifies agricultural land into 12 categories: urvara (fertile), ushara (barren), maru (desert), aprahata (fallow), shadvala (grassy), pankikala (muddy), jalaprayah (watery), kachchaha (contiguous to water), sharkara (full of pebbles and pieces of limestone), sharkaravati (sandy), nadimatruka (watered from a river), and devamatruka (rainfed). Some archaeologists believe that rice was a domesticated crop along the banks of the river Ganges in the sixth millennium BC.[32] So were species of winter cereals (barley, oats, and wheat) and legumes (lentil and chickpea) grown in northwest India before the sixth millennium BC.[citation needed] Other crops cultivated in India 3000 to 6000 years ago, include sesame, linseed, safflower, mustard, castor, mung bean, black gram, horse gram, pigeon pea, field pea, grass pea (khesari), fenugreek, cotton, jujube, grapes, dates, jack fruit, mango, mulberry, and black plum[citation needed]. Indians might have domesticated buffalo (the river type) 5000 years ago.[33]

According to some scientists agriculture was widespread in the Indian peninsula, 10000–3000 years ago, well beyond the fertile plains of the north. For example, one study reports 12 sites in the southern Indian states of Tamil Nadu, Andhra Pradesh and Karnataka providing clear evidence of agriculture of pulses Vigna radiata and Macrotyloma uniflorum, millet-grasses (Brachiaria ramosa and Setaria verticillata), wheats (Triticum dicoccum, Triticum durum/aestivum), barley (Hordeum vulgare), hyacinth bean (Lablab purpureus), sorghum (Sorghum bicolor), pearl millet (Pennisetum glaucum), finger millet (Eleusine coracana), cotton (Gossypium sp.), linseed (Linum sp.), as well as gathered fruits of Ziziphus and two Cucurbitaceae.[34][35]

Some claim Indian agriculture began by 9000 BC as a result of early cultivation of plants, and domestication of crops.[36] Settled life soon followed with implements and techniques being developed for agriculture.[37][38] Double monsoons led to two harvests being reaped in one year.[39] Indian products soon reached trading networks and foreign crops were introduced.[39][40] Plants and animals—considered esses "reeds that produce honey without bees" being grown. These were locally called साखर, (Sākhara). On their return journey soldiers carried the "honey bearing reeds," thus spreading sugar and sugarcane agriculture.[41][42] People in India had invented, by about 500 BC, the process to produce sugar crystals. In the local language, these crystals were called khanda (खण्ड), which is the source of the word candy.[43]

Before the 18th century, cultivation of sugarcane was largely confined to India. A few merchants began to trade in sugar – a luxury and an expensive spice in Europe until the 18th century. Sugar became widely popular in 18th-century Europe, then graduated to become a human necessity in the 19th century all over the world. Sugarcane plantations, just like cotton farms, became a major driver of large and forced human migrations in the 19th century and early 20th century – of people from Africa and from India, both in millions – influencing the ethnic mix, political conflicts and cultural evolution of Caribbean, South American, Indian Ocean and Pacific Island nations.[44][45]

The history and past accomplishments of Indian agriculture thus influenced, in part, colonialism, slavery and slavery-like indentured labour practices in the new world, Caribbean wars and world history in 18th and 19th centuries.[46][47][48][49][50]

Indian agriculture after independence edit

Despite some stagnation during the later modern era the independent Republic of India was able to develop a comprehensive agricultural programme.[51][52]

 
blueberry flower harvesting in India. This is a cash crop in Central Gujarat, India.

In the years since its independence, India has made immense progress towards food security. Indian population has tripled, and food-grain production more than quadrupled. There has been a substantial increase in available food-grain per capita.

 
The state of Punjab led India's Green Revolution and earned the distinction of being the country's bread basket.[53]

Before the mid-1960s, India relied on imports and food aid to meet domestic requirements. However, two years of severe drought in 1965 and 1966 convinced India to reform its agricultural policy and that it could not rely on foreign aid and imports for food security. India adopted significant policy reforms focused on the goal of food grain self-sufficiency. This ushered in India's Green Revolution. It began with the decision to adopt superior yielding, disease resistant wheat varieties in combination with better farming knowledge to improve productivity. The state of Punjab led India's green revolution and earned the distinction of being the country's breadbasket.[53]

The initial increase in production was centred on the irrigated areas of the states of Punjab, Haryana and western Uttar Pradesh. With the farmers and the government officials focusing on farm productivity and knowledge transfer, India's total food grain production soared. A hectare of Indian wheat farm that produced an average of 0.8 tonnes in 1948, produced 4.7 tonnes of wheat in 1975 from the same land. Such rapid growth in farm productivity enabled India to become self-sufficient by the 1970s. It also empowered the smallholder farmers to seek further means to increase food staples produced per hectare. By 2000, Indian farms were adopting wheat varieties capable of yielding 6 tonnes of wheat per hectare.[16][54]

 
Sunflower farm in Lepakshi, Andhra Pradesh

With agricultural policy success in wheat, India's Green Revolution technology spread to rice. However, since irrigation infrastructure was very poor, Indian farmers innovated with tube-wells, to harvest ground water. When gains from the new technology reached their limits in the states of initial adoption, the technology spread in the 1970s and 1980s to the states of eastern India — Bihar, Odisha and West Bengal. The lasting benefits of the improved seeds and new technology extended principally to the irrigated areas which account for about one-third of the harvested crop area. In the 1980s, Indian agriculture policy shifted to "evolution of a production pattern in line with the demand pattern" leading to a shift in emphasis to other agricultural commodities like oilseed, fruit and vegetables. Farmers began adopting improved methods and technologies in dairying, fisheries and livestock, and meeting the diversified food needs of a growing population.

As with rice, the lasting benefits of improved seeds and improved farming technologies now largely depends on whether India develops infrastructure such as irrigation network, flood control systems, reliable electricity production capacity, all-season rural and urban highways, cold storage to prevent spoilage, modern retail, and competitive buyers of produce from Indian farmers. This is increasingly the focus of Indian agriculture policy.

India ranks 74 out of 113 major countries in terms of food security index.[23] India's agricultural economy is undergoing structural changes. Between 1970 and 2011, the GDP share of agriculture has fallen from 43% to 16%. This isn't because of reduced importance of agriculture or a consequence of agricultural policy; rather, it is largely due to the rapid economic growth in services, industrial output, and non-agricultural sectors in India between 2000 and 2010.

Agricultural scientist MS Swaminathan has played a vital role in the green revolution. In 2013, NDTV named him one of 25 living legends of India for outstanding contributions to agriculture and making India a food-sovereign country.

 
An irrigation canal in Andhra Pradesh. Irrigation contributes significantly to agriculture in India.

Two states, Sikkim[55][56][57][58] and Kerala[59][60] have planned to shift fully to organic farming by 2015 and 2016 respectively.

Rates of electricity usage for agricultural purposes have been discussed extensively over the years.

Irrigation edit

Indian irrigation infrastructure includes a network of major and minor canals from rivers, groundwater well-based systems, tanks, and other rainwater harvesting projects for agricultural activities. Of these, the groundwater system is the largest.[61] Of the 160 million hectares of cultivated land in India, about 39 million hectare can be irrigated by groundwater wells and an additional 22 million hectares by irrigation canals.[62] In 2010, only about 35% of agricultural land in India was reliably irrigated.[63] About 2/3rd cultivated land in India is dependent on monsoons.[64] The improvements in irrigation infrastructure in the last 50 years have helped India improve food security, reduce dependence on monsoons, improve agricultural productivity and create rural job opportunities. Dams used for irrigation projects have helped provide drinking water to a growing rural population, control flood and prevent drought-related damage to agriculture.[65] However, free electricity and attractive minimum support price for water intensive crops such as sugarcane and rice have encouraged ground water mining leading to groundwater depletion and poor water quality.[66] A news report in 2019 states that more than 60% of the water available for farming in India is consumed by rice and sugar, two crops that occupy 24% of the cultivable area.[67]

Output edit

As of 2011, India had a large and diverse agricultural sector, accounting, on average, for about 16% of GDP and 10% of export earnings. India's arable land area of 1,597,000 km2 (394.6 million acres) is the second largest in the world, after the United States. Its gross irrigated crop area of 826,000 km2 (215.6 million acres) is the largest in the world. India is among the top three global producers of many crops, including wheat, rice, pulses, cotton, peanuts, fruits and vegetables. Worldwide, as of 2011, India had the largest herds of buffalo and cattle, is the largest producer of milk and has one of the largest and fastest growing poultry industries.[68]

Major products and yields edit

The following table presents the 20 most important agricultural products in India, by economic value, in 2009. Included in the table is the average productivity of India's farms for each produce. For context and comparison, included is the average of the most productive farms in the world and name of country where the most productive farms existed in 2010. The table suggests India has large potential for further accomplishments from productivity increases, in increased agricultural output and agricultural incomes.[69][70]

Largest agricultural products in India by value[71][72]
Rank Commodity Value (US$, 2016) Unit price
(US$ / kilogram, 2009)
Average yield
(tonnes per hectare, 2017)
Most productive country
(tonnes per hectare, 2017)
1 Rice $70.18 billion 0.27 3.85 9.82 Australia
2 Buffalo milk $43.09 billion 0.4 2.00[73] 2.00[73] India
3 Cow milk $32.55 billion 0.31 1.2[73] 10.3[73] Israel
4 Wheat $26.06 billion 0.15 2.8 8.9 Netherlands
5 Cotton (Lint + Seeds) $23.30 billion 1.43 1.6 4.6 Israel
6 Mangoes, guavas $14.52 billion 0.6 6.3 40.6 Cape Verde
7 Fresh Vegetables $11.87 billion 0.19 13.4 76.8 United States
8 Chicken meat $9.32 billion 0.64 10.6 20.2 Cyprus
9 Potatoes $8.23 billion 0.15 19.9 44.3 United States
10 Banana $8.13 billion 0.28 37.8 59.3 Indonesia
11 Sugar cane $7.44 billion 0.03 66 125 Peru
12 Maize $5.81 billion 0.42 1.1 5.5 Nicaragua
13 Oranges $5.62 billion
14 Tomatoes $5.50 billion 0.37 19.3 55.9 China
15 Chick peas $5.40 billion 0.4 0.9 2.8 China
16 Okra $5.25 billion 0.35 7.6 23.9 Israel
17 Soybeans $5.13 billion 0.26 1.1 3.7 Turkey
18 Hen eggs $4.64 billion 2.7 0.1[73] 0.42[73] Japan
19 Cauliflower and Broccoli $4.33 billion 2.69 0.138[73] 0.424[73] Thailand
20 Onions $4.05 billion 0.21 16.6 67.3 Ireland

In 2019, as per Food and Agriculture Organization Corporate Statistical Database (FAOSTAT) data, India produces various agriculture products in following values:[74]

FAOSTAT data for India, 2019
Item Value

(in tonnes)

Apples 2,316,000
Bananas 30,460,000
Beans, green 725,998
Cashew nuts, with shell 743,000
Castor oil seed 1,196,680
Cauliflowers and broccoli 9,083,000
Cherries 11,107
Chick peas 9,937,990
Chillies and peppers, dry 1,743,000
Chillies and peppers, green 81,837
Coconuts 14,682,000
Coffee, green 319,500
Cucumbers and gherkins 199,018
Garlic 2,910,000
Ginger 1 788,000
Grapes 3,041,000
Lemons and limes 3,482,000
Mangoes, mangosteens, guavas 25,631,000
Melons, other (inc.cantaloupes) 1,266,000
Mushrooms and truffles 182,000
Oilseeds nes 42,000
Onions, dry 22,819,000
Oranges 9,509,000
Papayas 6,050,000
Pears 300,000
Pineapples 1,711,000
Potatoes 50,190,000
Rice, paddy 177,645,000
Soybeans 13,267,520
Sugar cane 405,416,180
Sweet potatoes 1,156,000
Tea 1,390,080
Tobacco, unmanufactured 804,454
Tomatoes 19,007,000
Watermelons 2,495,000
Wheat 103,596,230

In addition to growth in total output, agriculture in India has shown an increase in average agricultural output per hectare in last 60 years. The table below presents average farm productivity in India over three farming years for some crops. Improving road and power generation infrastructure, knowledge gains and reforms has allowed India to increase farm productivity between 40% and 500% over 40 years.[24] India's recent accomplishments in crop yields while being impressive, are still just 30% to 60% of the best crop yields achievable in the farms of developed as well as other developing countries. Additionally, despite these gains in farm productivity, losses after harvest due to poor infrastructure and unorganised retail cause India to experience some of the highest food losses in the world.

Agriculture productivity in India, growth in average yields from 1970 to 2010 (in kilogram per hectare)
Crop[24] Average yield, 1970–1971 Average yield, 1990–1991 Average yield, 2010–2011[75] Average yield, 2019[76]
Rice 1123 1740 2240 4057.7
Wheat 1307 2281 2938 3533.4
Pulses 524 578 689 441.3
Oilseeds 579 771 1325 1592.8
Sugarcane 48322 65395 68596 80104.5
Tea 1182 1652 1669 2212.8
Cotton 106 225 510 1156.6
Production of crop for various years (in thousands of hectare)[77]
Crop 1961 1971 1981 1991 2001 2011
Rice 34694 34694 40708.4 42648.7 44900 44010
Wheat 12927 18240.5 22278.8 24167.1 25730.6 29068.6
Pulses 3592 2582.8 2388 2123.1 1650 1700
Oil seeds 486 453.3 557.5 557.5 716.7 1471
Sugar cane 2413 2615 2666.6 3686 4315.7 4944.39
Tea 331.229 358.675 384.242 421 504 600
Cotton 7719 7800 8057.4 7661.4 9100 12178

World's largest producer edit

The Statistics Office of the Food and Agriculture Organization reported that, per final numbers for 2009, India had grown to become the world's largest producer of the following agricultural products:[78][79]

Per final numbers for 2009, India is the world's second largest producer of the following agricultural products:[78]

In 2009, India was the world's third largest producer of eggs, oranges, coconuts, tomatoes, peas and beans.[78]

India and China are competing to establish the world record on rice yields. Yuan Longping of China National Hybrid Rice Research and Development Centre set a world record for rice yield in 2010 at 19 tonnes per hectare in a demonstration plot. In 2011, this record was surpassed by an Indian farmer, Sumant Kumar, with 22.4 tonnes per hectare in Bihar, also in a demonstration plot. These farmers claim to have employed newly developed rice breeds and system of rice intensification (SRI), a recent innovation in farming. The claimed Chinese and Indian yields have yet to be demonstrated on 7 hectare farm lots and that these are reproducible over two consecutive years on the same farm.[80][81][82][83]

Horticulture edit

The total production and economic value of horticultural produce, such as fruits, vegetables and nuts has doubled in India over the 10-year period from 2002 to 2012. In 2012, the production from horticulture exceeded grain output for the first time. The total horticulture produce reached 277.4 million metric tonnes in 2013, making India the second largest producer of horticultural products after China.[84] Of this, India in 2013 produced 81 million tonnes of fruits, 162 million tonnes of vegetables, 5.7 million tonnes of spices, 17 million tonnes of nuts and plantation products (cashew, cacao, coconut, etc.), 1 million tonnes of aromatic horticulture produce and 1.7 million tonnes of flowers (7.6 billion cut flowers).[85][86]

Horticultural productivity in India, 2013
Country[87] Area under fruits production
(million hectares)[87]
Average fruits yield
(metric tonnes per hectare)[87]
Area under vegetable production
(million hectares)[87]
Average vegetable yield
(metric tonnes per hectare)[87]
  India 7.0 11.6 9.2 52.36
  China 11.8 11.6 24.6 23.4
  Spain 1.54 9.1 0.32 39.3
  United States 1.14 23.3 1.1 32.5
World 57.3 11.3 60.0 19.7

During the 2013 fiscal year, India exported horticulture products worth 14,365 crore (US$1.8 billion), nearly double the value of its 2010 exports.[84] Along with these farm-level gains, the losses between farm and consumer increased and are estimated to range between 51 and 82 million metric tonnes a year.

Organic agriculture edit

Organic agriculture has fed India for centuries and it is again a growing sector in India. Organic production offers clean and green production methods without the use of synthetic fertilisers and pesticides and it achieves a premium price in the market place. India has 6,50,000 organic producers, which is more than any other country.[88] India also has 4 million hectares of land certified as organic wildculture, which is third in the world (after Finland and Zambia).[89] As non availability of edible biomass is impeding the growth of animal husbandry in India, organic production of protein rich cattle, fish and poultry feed using biogas /methane/natural gas by cultivating Methylococcus capsulatus bacteria with tiny land and water foot print is a solution for ensuring adequate protein rich food to the population.[90][91][92][93]

Agriculture based cooperatives edit

 
Transporting harvested sugarcane in a field in Maharashtra, India

India has seen a huge growth in cooperative societies, mainly in the farming sector, since 1947 when the country gained independence from Britain. The country has networks of cooperatives at the local, regional, state and national levels that assist in agricultural marketing. The commodities that are mostly handled are food grains, jute, cotton, sugar, milk, fruit and nuts[94] Support by the state government led to more than 25,000 cooperatives being set up by the 1990s in the state of Maharashtra.[95]

Sugar industry edit

Most of the sugar production in India takes place at mills owned by local cooperative societies.[67] The members of the society include all farmers, small and large, supplying sugarcane to the mill.[96] Over the last fifty years, the local sugar mills have played a crucial part in encouraging political participation and as a stepping stone for aspiring politicians.[97] This is particularly true in the state of Maharashtra where a large number of politicians belonging to the Congress party or NCP had ties to sugar cooperatives from their local area and has created a symbiotic relationship between the sugar factories and local politics.[98] However, the policy of "profits for the company but losses to be borne by the government", has made a number of these operations inefficient.[99][95]

Marketing edit

As with sugar, cooperatives play a significant part in the overall marketing of fruit and vegetables in India. Since the 1980s, the amount of produce handled by Cooperative societies has increased exponentially. Common fruit and vegetables marketed by the societies include bananas, mangoes, grapes, onions and many others.[100]

Dairy industry edit

 
The Banas Dairy Plant in Faridabad, Haryana

Dairy farming based on the Amul Pattern, with a single marketing cooperative, is India's largest self-sustaining industry and its largest rural employment provider. Successful implementation of the Amul model has made India the world's largest milk producer.[101] Here small, marginal farmers with a couple or so heads of milch cattle queue up twice daily to pour milk from their small containers into the village union collection points. The milk after processing at the district unions is then marketed by the state cooperative federation nationally under the Amul brand name, India's largest food brand. With the Anand pattern three-fourth of the price paid by the mainly urban consumers goes into the hands of millions of small dairy farmers, who are the owners of the brand and the cooperative.[102]

Banking and rural credit edit

Cooperative banks play a great part in providing credit in rural parts of India. Just like the sugar cooperatives, these institutions serve as the power base for local politicians.[95]

Problems edit

 
District wise agricultural productivity in India (2003–05). Productivity varies highly across regions.
 
Spices at a store, at Khari Baoli, Old Delhi. Farmers with limited marketing options sell their surplus produce.
 
India lacks cold storage, food packaging, and a safe and efficient rural transport system. This causes one of the world's highest food spoilage rates, particularly during monsoons and other adverse weather conditions. Consumers buy agricultural produce in suburban markets such as the one shown or from roadside vendors.
 
Indian agriculture includes a mix of traditional to modern farming techniques. In some parts of India, traditional use of cattle to plough remains in use. Traditional farms have some of the lowest per capita productivities and farmer incomes.
 
Since 2002, India has become the world's largest manufacturer of tractors with 29% of world's output in 2013; it is also the world's largest tractor market.[103][104] Above, a tractor in Rewari, Haryana.

"Slow agricultural growth is a concern for policymakers as some two-thirds of India's people depend on rural employment for a living. Current agricultural practices are neither economically nor environmentally sustainable and India's yields for many agricultural commodities are low. Poorly maintained irrigation systems and almost universal lack of good extension services are among the factors responsible. Farmers' access to markets is hampered by poor roads, rudimentary market infrastructure, and excessive regulation."

— World Bank: "India Country Overview 2008"[105]

"With a population of just over 1.3 billion, India is the world's largest democracy. In the past decade, the country has witnessed accelerated economic growth, emerged as a global player with the world's fourth largest economy in purchasing power parity terms, and made progress towards achieving most of the Millennium Development Goals. India's integration into the global economy has been accompanied by impressive economic growth that has brought significant economic and social benefits to the country. Nevertheless, disparities in income and human development are on the rise. Preliminary estimates suggest that in 2009–10 the combined all India poverty rate was 32 % compared to 37 % in 2004–05. Going forward, it will be essential for India to build a productive, competitive, and diversified agricultural sector and facilitate rural, non-farm entrepreneurship and employment. Encouraging policies that promote competition in agricultural marketing will ensure that farmers receive better prices."

— World Bank: "India Country Overview 2011"[17]

A 2003 analysis of India's agricultural growth from 1970 to 2001 by the Food and Agriculture Organization identified systemic problems in Indian agriculture. For food staples, the annual growth rate in production during the six-year segments 1970–76, 1976–82, 1982–88, 1988–1994, 1994–2000 were found to be respectively 2.5, 2.5, 3.0, 2.6, and 1.8% per annum. Corresponding analyses for the index of total agricultural production show a similar pattern, with the growth rate for 1994–2000 attaining only 1.5% per annum.[106]

The biggest problem of farmers is the low price for their farm produce. A recent study showed that proper pricing based on energy of production and equating farming wages to Industrial wages may be beneficial for the farmers.[107]

Infrastructure edit

India has very poor rural roads affecting timely supply of inputs and timely transfer of outputs from Indian farms. Irrigation systems are inadequate, leading to crop failures in some parts of the country because of lack of water. In other areas regional floods, poor seed quality and inefficient farming practices, lack of cold storage and harvest spoilage cause over 30% of farmer's produce going to waste, lack of organised retail and competing buyers thereby limiting Indian farmer's ability to sell the surplus and commercial crops.

The Indian farmer receives just 10% to 23% of the price the Indian consumer pays for exactly the same produce, the difference going to losses, inefficiencies and middlemen. Farmers in developed economies of Europe and the United States receive 64% to 81%.[citation needed]

Productivity edit

Although India has attained self-sufficiency in food staples, the productivity of its farms is below that of Brazil, the United States, France and other nations. Indian wheat farms, for example, produce about a third of the wheat per hectare per year compared to farms in France. Rice productivity in India was less than half that of China. Other staples productivity in India is similarly low. Indian total factor productivity growth remains below 2% per annum; in contrast, China's total factor productivity growths is about 6% per annum, even though China also has smallholding farmers. Several studies suggest India could eradicate its hunger and malnutrition and be a major source of food for the world by achieving productivity comparable with other countries.[citation needed]

By contrast, Indian farms in some regions post the best yields, for sugarcane, cassava and tea crops.[108]

Crop yields vary significantly between Indian states. Some states produce two to three times more grain per acre than others.

As the map shows, the traditional regions of high agricultural productivity in India are the north west (Punjab, Haryana and Western Uttar Pradesh), coastal districts on both coasts, West Bengal and Tamil Nadu. In recent years, the states of Madhya Pradesh, Jharkhand, Chhattisgarh in central India and Gujarat in the west have shown rapid agricultural growth.[109]

The table compares the statewide average yields for a few major agricultural crops in India, for 2001–2002.[110]

Crop[110] Average farm yield in Bihar Average farm yield in Karnataka Average farm yield in Punjab
kilogram per hectare kilogram per hectare kilogram per hectare
Wheat 2020 unknown 3880
Rice 1370 2380 3130
Pulses 610 470 820
Oil seeds 620 680 1200
Sugarcane 45510 79560 65300

Crop yields for some farms in India are within 90% of the best achieved yields by farms in developed countries such as the United States and in European Union. No single state of India is best in every crop. Tamil Nadu achieved highest yields in rice and sugarcane, Haryana in wheat and coarse grains, Karnataka in cotton, Bihar in pulses, while other states do well in horticulture, aquaculture, flower and fruit plantations. These differences in agricultural productivity are a function of local infrastructure, soil quality, micro-climates, local resources, farmer knowledge and innovations.[110]

The Indian food distribution system is highly inefficient. Movement of agricultural produce is heavily regulated, with inter-state and even inter-district restrictions on marketing and movement of agricultural goods.[110]

One study suggests Indian agricultural policy should best focus on improving rural infrastructure primarily in the form of irrigation and flood control infrastructure, knowledge transfer of better yielding and more disease resistant seeds. Additionally, cold storage, hygienic food packaging and efficient modern retail to reduce waste can improve output and rural incomes.[110]

The low productivity in India is a result of the following factors:

  • The average size of land holdings is very small (less than 2 hectares) and is subject to fragmentation due to land ceiling acts, and in some cases, family disputes. Such small holdings are often over-manned, resulting in disguised unemployment and low productivity of labour. Some reports claim smallholder farming may not be cause of poor productivity, since the productivity is higher in China and many developing economies even though China smallholder farmers constitute over 97% of its farming population.[111] A Chinese smallholder farmer is able to rent his land to larger farmers, China's organised retail and extensive Chinese highways are able to provide the incentive and infrastructure necessary to its farmers for sharp increases in farm productivity.
  • Adoption of modern agricultural practices and use of technology is inadequate in comparison with Green Revolution methods and technologies, hampered by ignorance of such practices, high costs and impracticality in the case of small land holdings.
  • According to the World Bank, Indian branch's Priorities for Agriculture and Rural Development, India's large agricultural subsidies are hampering productivity-enhancing investment. This evaluation is based largely on a productivity agenda and does not take any ecological implications into account. According to a neo-liberal view, over-regulation of agriculture has increased costs, price risks and uncertainty because the government intervenes in labour, land, and credit markets. India has inadequate infrastructure and services.[112] The World Bank also says that the allocation of water is inefficient, unsustainable and inequitable. The irrigation infrastructure is deteriorating.[112] The overuse of water is being covered by over-pumping aquifers but, as these are falling by one foot of groundwater each year, this is a limited resource.[113] The Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change released a report that food security may be a big problem in the region post 2030.[114]
  • Illiteracy, general socio-economic backwardness, slow progress in implementing land reforms and inadequate or inefficient finance and marketing services for farm produce.
  • Inconsistent government policy. Agricultural subsidies and taxes are often changed without notice for short term political ends.
  • Irrigation facilities are inadequate, as revealed by the fact that only 52.6% of the land was irrigated in 2003–04,[115] which result in farmers still being dependent on rainfall, specifically the monsoon season. A good monsoon results in a robust growth for the economy, while a poor monsoon leads to a sluggish growth.[116] Farm credit is regulated by NABARD, which is the statutory apex agent for rural development in the subcontinent. At the same time, over-pumping made possible by subsidised electric power is leading to an alarming drop in aquifer levels.[117][118][119]
  • A third of all food that is produced rots due to inefficient supply chains and the use of the "Walmart model" to improve efficiency is blocked by laws against foreign investment in the retail sector.[120]

Farmer suicides edit

In 2012, the National Crime Records Bureau of India reported 13,754 farmer suicides.[121] Farmer suicides account for 11.2% of all suicides in India.[121][122] Activists and scholars have offered a number of conflicting reasons for farmer suicides, such as monsoon failure, high debt burdens, genetically modified crops, government policies, public mental health, personal issues and family problems.[123][124][125]

Marketing edit

Agromarketing is poorly developed in India.[126]

Diversion of agricultural land for non-agricultural purpose edit

Indian National Policy for Farmers of 2007[127] stated that "prime farmland must be conserved for agriculture except under exceptional circumstances, provided that the agencies that are provided with agricultural land for non-agricultural projects should compensate for treatment and full development of equivalent degraded or wastelands elsewhere". The policy suggested that, as far as possible, land with low farming yields or that was not farmable should be earmarked for non-agricultural purposes such as construction, industrial parks and other commercial development.[127]

Amartya Sen offered a counter viewpoint, stating that "prohibiting the use of agricultural land for commercial and industrial development is ultimately self-defeating."[128] He stated that agricultural land may be better suited for non-agriculture purposes if industrial production could generate many times more than the value of the product produced by agriculture.[128] Sen suggested India needed to bring productive industry everywhere, wherever there are advantages of production, market needs and the locational preferences of managers, engineers, technical experts as well as unskilled labour because of education, healthcare and other infrastructure. He stated that instead of government controlling land allocation based on soil characteristics, the market economy should determine productive allocation of land.[128]

Please check the validity of the source listed above.

Climate change edit

Climate Change in India will have a disproportionate impact on the more than 400 million that makeup India's poor community. This is because so many depend on natural resources for their food, shelter and income. More than 56% of people in India work in agriculture, while many others earn their living in coastal areas.[129]

The impact of climate change on Indian agriculture was investigated through the National Innovations in Climate Resilient Agriculture (NICRA) study. The findings indicate that rainfed rice yields in India are expected to experience a marginal reduction of less than 2.5% in the years 2050 and 2080. On the other hand, irrigated rice yields are projected to decline by 7% in 2050 and 10% in 2080 scenarios. Moreover, the study forecasts a decrease in wheat yield ranging from 6% to 25% in the year 2100, while maize yields are estimated to decrease by 18% to 23% during the same period. However, there is a potential positive impact on chickpea, with anticipated productivity increases of 23% to 54% in the future climates.[130]

Initiatives edit

 
Viticulture farms in Maharashtra
 
Tea plantation in Tamil Nadu

The required level of investment for the development of marketing, storage and cold storage infrastructure is estimated to be huge. The government has not been able to implement schemes to raise investment in marketing infrastructure. Among these schemes are 'Construction of Rural Godowns', 'Market Research and Information Network', and 'Development / Strengthening of Agricultural Marketing Infrastructure, Grading and Standardisation'.[131]

The Indian Council of Agricultural Research (ICAR), established in 1905, was responsible for the search leading to the "Indian Green Revolution" of the 1970s. The ICAR is the apex body in agriculture and related allied fields, including research and education.[132] The Union Minister of Agriculture is the president of the ICAR. The Indian Agricultural Statistics Research Institute develops new techniques for the design of agricultural experiments, analyses data in agriculture, and specialises in statistical techniques for animal and plant breeding.[citation needed]

Recently (May 2016) the government of India has set up the Farmers Commission to completely evaluate the agriculture programme.[133] Its recommendations have had a mixed reception.[citation needed]

In November 2011, India announced major reforms in organised retail. These reforms would include logistics and retail of agricultural produce. The announcement led to major political controversy. The reforms were placed on hold by the government in December 2011.[citation needed]

In the summer of 2012, the subsidised electricity for pumping, which has caused an alarming drop in aquifer levels, put additional strain on the country's electrical grid due to a 19% drop in monsoon rains and may have contributed to a blackout across much of the country. In response the state of Bihar offered farmers over $100 million in subsidised diesel to operate their pumps.[134]

In 2015, Narendra Modi announced to double farmer's income by 2022.[135]

Startups with niche technology and new business models are working to solve problems in Indian agriculture and its marketing.[136] Kandawale is one such e-commerce website which sells Indian red onions to bulk users direct from farmers, reducing unnecessary cost escalations.

Agriculture and Indian economy edit

The contributions of agriculture in the Indian economy have been increasing over the years. According to the economic survey, the share of agriculture in gross domestic product (GDP) reached almost 20% for the first time in 17 years, making a sole bright spot in performance during financial year 2020–2021.[137]

Modern farms and agriculture operations have changed over the years primarily because of advancements in technology, including sensors, devices, machines, and information technology.[138]

Personalized e-commerce stores and market places have brought farming products like fertilizers, seeds, machines and equipment that help farmers grow quality products. Educational portals let farmers know innovative things about farming that increase the contributions of agriculture to the economy.[139][140]

Organic farming edit

Paramparagat Krishi Vikas Yojana (PKVY) was launched in 2015 by the Narendra Modi regime to promote organic farming, under which farmers form organic farming clusters of 50 or more farmers with a minimum total area of 50 acres to share organic methods using traditional sustainable methods, costs, and marketing, etc. It initially aimed to have 10,000 clusters by 2018 with at least 500,000 acres under organic farming and government "cover the certification costs and promote organic farming through the use of traditional resources." Government provides INR 20,000 per acre benefit over three years.[141]

Other techniques of organic farming like zero budget natural farming (ZBNF) have been implemented by many small-scale farmers in Wayanad, Kerela. In this process they implement more natural and ecological methods of farming that decrease or completely cease use of pesticides and damaging chemicals, allievating the damage that, "Decades of overuse of chemicals and mono cropping and lack of management of soil fertility have depleted the formerly fertile forest-land" [142] in the area.

Along with progression with organic farming methods, new technologies in the form of moisture sensors and artificial intelligence are also being implemented in the Indian farming sector. Farmers are using moisture sensors to ensure that different crops have the exact amount of water that they need, which ensures that farmers can maximise crop yield.[citation needed] Along with this, artificial intelligence techniques are being implemented in food processing plants across India, where "AI provides more efficient ways to produce, harvest, and sell crops products as well as an emphasis on checking defective crops and improving the potential for healthy crop production" that further helps maximise crop yield as Rayda Ayed describes in her research on the impact of artificial intelligence in India.[143]

Government schemes edit

Maps edit

See also edit

Bibliography edit

  • George A. Grierson (1885). Bihar Peasant Life. Bengal Secretariat Press, Calcutta.

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Further reading edit

  • Agarwal, Ankit (2011), "Theory of Optimum Utilisation of Resources in agriculture during the Gupta Period"[permanent dead link], History Today 12, New Delhi, ISSN 2249-748X.
  • Akhilesh, K. B., and Kavitha Sooda. "A Study on Impact of Technology Intervention in the Field of Agriculture in India." in Smart Technologies (Springer, Singapore, 2020) pp. 373–385.
  • Bhagowalia, Priya, S. Kadiyala, and D. Headey. "Agriculture, income and nutrition linkages in India: Insights from a nationally representative survey." (2012). online
  • Bhan, Suraj, and U. K. Behera. "Conservation agriculture in India–Problems, prospects and policy issues." International Soil and Water Conservation Research 2.4 (2014): 1–12.
  • Bharti, N. (2018), "Evolution of agriculture finance in India: a historical perspective", Agricultural Finance Review, Vol. 78 No. 3, pp. 376–392. https://doi.org/10.1108/AFR-05-2017-0035
  • Brink, Lars. "Support to Agriculture in India in 1995-2013 and the Rules of the WTO." International Agricultural Trade Research Consortium (IATRC) Working Paper 14-01 (2014) online.
  • Brown, Trent. Farmers, Subalterns, and activists: social politics of sustainable agriculture in India (Cambridge University Press, 2018).
  • Chauhan, Bhagirath Singh, et al. "Global warming and its possible impact on agriculture in India." in Advances in agronomy (Academic Press, 2014) pp. 65–121.online[dead link]
  • Chengappa, P. G. "Presidential Address: Secondary Agriculture: A Driver for Growth of Primary Agriculture in India." Indian Journal of Agricultural Economics 68.902-2016-66819 (2013): 1–19. online
  • Dev, S. Mahendra, Srijit Mishra, and Vijay Laxmi Pandey. "Agriculture in India: Performance, Challenges, and Opportunities." in A Concise Handbook of the Indian Economy in the 21st Century (Oxford University Press, 2014) pp. 321–350.
  • Goyal, S. & Prabha, & Rai, Dr & Singh, Shree Ram. Indian Agriculture and Farmers-Problems and Reforms. (2016)
  • Kekane Maruti Arjun. "Indian, Agriculture- Status, Importance and Role in Indian Economy," International Journal of Agriculture and Food Science Technology, ISSN 2249-3050, Volume 4, Number 4 (2013), pp. 343–346.
  • Kumar, Anjani, Krishna M. Singh, and Shradhajali Sinha. "Institutional credit to agriculture sector in India: Status, performance and determinants." Agricultural Economics Research Review 23.2 (2010): 253-264 online.
  • Manida, Mr M., and G. Nedumaran. "Agriculture In India: Information About Indian Agriculture & Its Importance." Aegaeum Journal, 8#3 (2020) online
  • Mathur, Archana S., Surajit Das, and Subhalakshmi Sircar. "Status of agriculture in India: trends and prospects." Economic and political weekly (2006): 5327-5336 online.
  • Nedumaran, Dr G. "E-Agriculture and Rural Development in India." (2020). online
  • Ramakumar, R. "Large‐scale Investments in Agriculture in India." IDS Bulletin 43 (2012): 92–103. online
  • Ramakumar, R. "Agriculture and the Covid-19 Pandemic: An Analysis with Special Reference to India." Review of Agrarian Studies 10.2369-2020-1856 (2020) online.
  • Saradhi, Byra Pardha, et al. "Significant Trends in the Digital Transformation of Agriculture in India." International Journal of Grid and Distributed Computing 13.1 (2020): 2703-2709 [2].
  • Sharma, Shalendra D. (1999), Development and Democracy in India, Lynne Rienner Publishers, pp. 125–, ISBN 978-1-55587-810-8

External links edit

  • Indian Agriculture. U.S. Library of Congress.
  • Indian Agriculture Data. Statistical information about Agriculture in India.
  • Government of India, Ministry of Agriculture, Department of Agriculture & Cooperation website
  • Principal crops of India and problems with Indian agriculture A collection of statistics (from India Statistical Report, 2011) along with sections of this Wikipedia article and YouTube videos.
  • A December 2011 policy paper analysing the forces behind the rising consumption and production of meat, eggs, and dairy products in India, and the effects on India's people, environment, animals, and the global climate.
  • Mukherji, Biman (28 October 2013). "India's farmers start to mechanise amid a labour shortage, increasing productivity. - WSJ.com". Wall Street Journal. Online.wsj.com. Retrieved 30 October 2013.

agriculture, india, history, agriculture, india, dates, back, neolithic, period, india, ranks, second, worldwide, farm, outputs, indian, economic, survey, 2020, agriculture, employed, more, than, indian, workforce, contributed, country, development, agricultur. The history of agriculture in India dates back to the Neolithic period India ranks second worldwide in farm outputs As per the Indian economic survey 2020 21 agriculture employed more than 50 of the Indian workforce and contributed 20 2 to the country s GDP 1 Development of agricultural output of India in 2015 US Share of labour force employed in agriculture in India In 2016 agriculture and allied sectors like animal husbandry forestry and fisheries accounted for 17 5 of the GDP gross domestic product with about 41 49 of the workforce in 2020 2 3 4 5 India ranks first in the world with highest net cropped area followed by US and China 6 The economic contribution of agriculture to India s GDP is steadily declining with the country s broad based economic growth Still agriculture is demographically the broadest economic sector and plays a significant role in the overall socio economic fabric of India The total agriculture commodities export was US 3 50 billion in March June 2020 India exported 38 billion worth of agricultural products in 2013 making it the seventh largest agricultural exporter worldwide and the sixth largest net exporter 7 Most of its agriculture exports serve developing and least developed nations 7 Indian agricultural horticultural and processed foods are exported to more than 120 countries primarily to the Japan Southeast Asia SAARC countries the European Union and the United States 8 9 Contents 1 Definition of farmer 2 Overview 3 History 3 1 Indian agriculture after independence 4 Irrigation 5 Output 5 1 Major products and yields 5 2 World s largest producer 5 3 Horticulture 5 4 Organic agriculture 6 Agriculture based cooperatives 6 1 Sugar industry 6 2 Marketing 6 3 Dairy industry 6 4 Banking and rural credit 7 Problems 7 1 Infrastructure 7 2 Productivity 7 3 Farmer suicides 7 4 Marketing 7 5 Diversion of agricultural land for non agricultural purpose 7 6 Climate change 8 Initiatives 8 1 Agriculture and Indian economy 8 2 Organic farming 8 3 Government schemes 9 Maps 10 See also 11 Bibliography 12 References 13 Further reading 14 External linksDefinition of farmer editIndian farmers are people who grow crops as a profession 10 Various government estimates Census Agricultural Census National Sample Survey assessments and Periodic Labour Force Surveys give a different number of farmers in the country ranging from 37 million to 118 million as per the different definitions 11 Some definitions take in to account the number of holdings as compared to the number of farmers 11 Other definitions take into account possession of land while others try to delink land ownership from the definition of a farmer 12 Other terms also used include cultivator 12 India s National Policy for Farmers 2007 defines farmer as 10 For the purpose of this Policy the term FARMER will refer to a person actively engaged in the economic and or livelihood activity of growing crops and producing other primary agricultural commodities and will include all agricultural operational holders cultivators agricultural labourers sharecroppers tenants poultry and livestock rearers fishers beekeepers gardeners pastoralists non corporate planters and planting labourers as well as persons engaged in various farmingrelated occupations such as sericulture vermiculture and agro forestry The term will also include tribal families persons engaged in shifting cultivation and in the collection use and sale of timber and non timber forest produce However this definition has not been adopted 10 Overview edit nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp Threshing cotton picking rice farming and tea leaf plucking nbsp Worldwide employment In agriculture forestry and fishing in 2021 India has one of the highest number of people employed in these sectors As per the 2014 FAO world agriculture statistics India is the world s largest producer of many fresh fruits like banana mango guava papaya lemon and vegetables like chickpea okra and milk major spices like chili pepper ginger fibrous crops such as jute staples such as millets and castor oil seed India is the second largest producer of wheat and rice the world s major food staples 13 India is currently the world s second largest producer of several dry fruits agriculture based textile raw materials roots and tuber crops pulses farmed fish eggs coconut sugarcane and numerous vegetables India is ranked under the world s five largest producers of over 80 of agricultural produce items including many cash crops such as coffee and cotton in 2010 13 India is one of the world s five largest producers of livestock and poultry meat with one of the fastest growth rates as of 2011 update 14 One report from 2008 claimed that India s population is growing faster than its ability to produce rice and wheat 15 While other recent studies claim that India can easily feed its growing population plus produce wheat and rice for global exports if it can reduce food staple spoilage wastage improve its infrastructure and raise its farm productivity like those achieved by other developing countries such as Brazil and China 16 17 In fiscal year ending June 2011 with a normal monsoon season Indian agriculture accomplished an all time record production of 85 9 million tonnes of wheat a 6 4 increase from a year earlier Rice output in India hit a new record at 95 3 million tonnes a 7 increase from the year earlier 18 Lentils and many other food staples production also increased year over year Indian farmers thus produced about 71 kilograms of wheat and 80 kilograms of rice for every member of Indian population in 2011 The per capita supply of rice every year in India is now higher than the per capita consumption of rice every year in Japan 19 India exported 39 billion worth of agricultural products in 2013 making it the seventh largest agricultural exporter worldwide and the sixth largest net exporter 7 This represents explosive growth as in 2004 net exports were about 5 billion 7 India is the fastest growing exporter of agricultural products over a 10 year period its 39 billion of net export is more than double the combined exports of the European Union EU 28 7 It has become one of the world s largest supplier of rice cotton sugar and wheat India exported around 2 million metric tonnes of wheat and 2 1 million metric tonnes of rice in 2011 to Africa Nepal Bangladesh and other regions around the world 18 Aquaculture and catch fishery is amongst the fastest growing industries in India Between 1990 and 2010 the Indian fish capture harvest doubled while aquaculture harvest tripled In 2008 India was the world s sixth largest producer of marine and freshwater capture fisheries and the second largest aquaculture farmed fish producer India exported 600 000 metric tonnes of fish products to nearly half of the world s countries 20 21 22 Though the available nutritional standard is 100 of the requirement India lags far behind in terms of quality protein intake at 20 which is to be tackled by making available protein rich food products such as eggs meat fish chicken etc at affordable prices 23 India has shown a steady average nationwide annual increase in the mass produced per hectare for some agricultural items over the last 60 years These gains have come mainly from India s green revolution improving road and power generation infrastructure knowledge of gains and reforms 24 Despite these recent accomplishments agriculture has the potential for major productivity and total output gains because crop yields in India are still just 30 to 60 of the best sustainable crop yields achievable in the farms of developed and other developing countries 25 Additionally post harvest losses due to poor infrastructure and unorganised retail caused India to experience some of the highest food losses in the world 26 27 nbsp Kurmi farmers of rural Bihar have started using modern agriculture technology One of India s major agricultural products rice is suffering as a result of shifting monsoon patterns States in the East and Northeast of the country Uttar Pradesh Bihar and Odisha have experienced high temperatures and insufficient rainfall in 2022 in contrast to Central and Southern India which has experienced excessive rain in recent months resulting in flooding in the Southern states of Kerala Karnataka and Madhya Pradesh 28 29 30 The rice crop this season is therefore anticipated to decrease by roughly 6 77 million tonnes to 104 99 million according to India s ministry of agriculture 28 30 History editThis article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Agriculture in India news newspapers books scholar JSTOR April 2016 Learn how and when to remove this template message Main article History of agriculture in India Vedic literature provides some of the earliest written record of agriculture in India Rigveda hymns for example describes ploughing fallowing irrigation fruit and vegetable cultivation Other historical evidence suggests rice and cotton were cultivated in the Indus Valley and ploughing patterns from the Bronze Age have been excavated at Kalibangan in Rajasthan 31 Bhumivargaha an Indian Sanskrit text suggested to be 2500 years old classifies agricultural land into 12 categories urvara fertile ushara barren maru desert aprahata fallow shadvala grassy pankikala muddy jalaprayah watery kachchaha contiguous to water sharkara full of pebbles and pieces of limestone sharkaravati sandy nadimatruka watered from a river and devamatruka rainfed Some archaeologists believe that rice was a domesticated crop along the banks of the river Ganges in the sixth millennium BC 32 So were species of winter cereals barley oats and wheat and legumes lentil and chickpea grown in northwest India before the sixth millennium BC citation needed Other crops cultivated in India 3000 to 6000 years ago include sesame linseed safflower mustard castor mung bean black gram horse gram pigeon pea field pea grass pea khesari fenugreek cotton jujube grapes dates jack fruit mango mulberry and black plum citation needed Indians might have domesticated buffalo the river type 5000 years ago 33 According to some scientists agriculture was widespread in the Indian peninsula 10000 3000 years ago well beyond the fertile plains of the north For example one study reports 12 sites in the southern Indian states of Tamil Nadu Andhra Pradesh and Karnataka providing clear evidence of agriculture of pulses Vigna radiata and Macrotyloma uniflorum millet grasses Brachiaria ramosa and Setaria verticillata wheats Triticum dicoccum Triticum durum aestivum barley Hordeum vulgare hyacinth bean Lablab purpureus sorghum Sorghum bicolor pearl millet Pennisetum glaucum finger millet Eleusine coracana cotton Gossypium sp linseed Linum sp as well as gathered fruits of Ziziphus and two Cucurbitaceae 34 35 Some claim Indian agriculture began by 9000 BC as a result of early cultivation of plants and domestication of crops 36 Settled life soon followed with implements and techniques being developed for agriculture 37 38 Double monsoons led to two harvests being reaped in one year 39 Indian products soon reached trading networks and foreign crops were introduced 39 40 Plants and animals considered esses reeds that produce honey without bees being grown These were locally called स खर Sakhara On their return journey soldiers carried the honey bearing reeds thus spreading sugar and sugarcane agriculture 41 42 People in India had invented by about 500 BC the process to produce sugar crystals In the local language these crystals were called khanda खण ड which is the source of the word candy 43 Before the 18th century cultivation of sugarcane was largely confined to India A few merchants began to trade in sugar a luxury and an expensive spice in Europe until the 18th century Sugar became widely popular in 18th century Europe then graduated to become a human necessity in the 19th century all over the world Sugarcane plantations just like cotton farms became a major driver of large and forced human migrations in the 19th century and early 20th century of people from Africa and from India both in millions influencing the ethnic mix political conflicts and cultural evolution of Caribbean South American Indian Ocean and Pacific Island nations 44 45 The history and past accomplishments of Indian agriculture thus influenced in part colonialism slavery and slavery like indentured labour practices in the new world Caribbean wars and world history in 18th and 19th centuries 46 47 48 49 50 Indian agriculture after independence editDespite some stagnation during the later modern era the independent Republic of India was able to develop a comprehensive agricultural programme 51 52 nbsp blueberry flower harvesting in India This is a cash crop in Central Gujarat India In the years since its independence India has made immense progress towards food security Indian population has tripled and food grain production more than quadrupled There has been a substantial increase in available food grain per capita nbsp The state of Punjab led India s Green Revolution and earned the distinction of being the country s bread basket 53 Before the mid 1960s India relied on imports and food aid to meet domestic requirements However two years of severe drought in 1965 and 1966 convinced India to reform its agricultural policy and that it could not rely on foreign aid and imports for food security India adopted significant policy reforms focused on the goal of food grain self sufficiency This ushered in India s Green Revolution It began with the decision to adopt superior yielding disease resistant wheat varieties in combination with better farming knowledge to improve productivity The state of Punjab led India s green revolution and earned the distinction of being the country s breadbasket 53 The initial increase in production was centred on the irrigated areas of the states of Punjab Haryana and western Uttar Pradesh With the farmers and the government officials focusing on farm productivity and knowledge transfer India s total food grain production soared A hectare of Indian wheat farm that produced an average of 0 8 tonnes in 1948 produced 4 7 tonnes of wheat in 1975 from the same land Such rapid growth in farm productivity enabled India to become self sufficient by the 1970s It also empowered the smallholder farmers to seek further means to increase food staples produced per hectare By 2000 Indian farms were adopting wheat varieties capable of yielding 6 tonnes of wheat per hectare 16 54 nbsp Sunflower farm in Lepakshi Andhra Pradesh With agricultural policy success in wheat India s Green Revolution technology spread to rice However since irrigation infrastructure was very poor Indian farmers innovated with tube wells to harvest ground water When gains from the new technology reached their limits in the states of initial adoption the technology spread in the 1970s and 1980s to the states of eastern India Bihar Odisha and West Bengal The lasting benefits of the improved seeds and new technology extended principally to the irrigated areas which account for about one third of the harvested crop area In the 1980s Indian agriculture policy shifted to evolution of a production pattern in line with the demand pattern leading to a shift in emphasis to other agricultural commodities like oilseed fruit and vegetables Farmers began adopting improved methods and technologies in dairying fisheries and livestock and meeting the diversified food needs of a growing population As with rice the lasting benefits of improved seeds and improved farming technologies now largely depends on whether India develops infrastructure such as irrigation network flood control systems reliable electricity production capacity all season rural and urban highways cold storage to prevent spoilage modern retail and competitive buyers of produce from Indian farmers This is increasingly the focus of Indian agriculture policy India ranks 74 out of 113 major countries in terms of food security index 23 India s agricultural economy is undergoing structural changes Between 1970 and 2011 the GDP share of agriculture has fallen from 43 to 16 This isn t because of reduced importance of agriculture or a consequence of agricultural policy rather it is largely due to the rapid economic growth in services industrial output and non agricultural sectors in India between 2000 and 2010 Agricultural scientist MS Swaminathan has played a vital role in the green revolution In 2013 NDTV named him one of 25 living legends of India for outstanding contributions to agriculture and making India a food sovereign country nbsp An irrigation canal in Andhra Pradesh Irrigation contributes significantly to agriculture in India Two states Sikkim 55 56 57 58 and Kerala 59 60 have planned to shift fully to organic farming by 2015 and 2016 respectively Rates of electricity usage for agricultural purposes have been discussed extensively over the years Irrigation editMain article Irrigation in India Indian irrigation infrastructure includes a network of major and minor canals from rivers groundwater well based systems tanks and other rainwater harvesting projects for agricultural activities Of these the groundwater system is the largest 61 Of the 160 million hectares of cultivated land in India about 39 million hectare can be irrigated by groundwater wells and an additional 22 million hectares by irrigation canals 62 In 2010 only about 35 of agricultural land in India was reliably irrigated 63 About 2 3rd cultivated land in India is dependent on monsoons 64 The improvements in irrigation infrastructure in the last 50 years have helped India improve food security reduce dependence on monsoons improve agricultural productivity and create rural job opportunities Dams used for irrigation projects have helped provide drinking water to a growing rural population control flood and prevent drought related damage to agriculture 65 However free electricity and attractive minimum support price for water intensive crops such as sugarcane and rice have encouraged ground water mining leading to groundwater depletion and poor water quality 66 A news report in 2019 states that more than 60 of the water available for farming in India is consumed by rice and sugar two crops that occupy 24 of the cultivable area 67 Further information on the innovative water harvesting technique BhungrooOutput editAs of 2011 update India had a large and diverse agricultural sector accounting on average for about 16 of GDP and 10 of export earnings India s arable land area of 1 597 000 km2 394 6 million acres is the second largest in the world after the United States Its gross irrigated crop area of 826 000 km2 215 6 million acres is the largest in the world India is among the top three global producers of many crops including wheat rice pulses cotton peanuts fruits and vegetables Worldwide as of 2011 update India had the largest herds of buffalo and cattle is the largest producer of milk and has one of the largest and fastest growing poultry industries 68 Major products and yields edit The following table presents the 20 most important agricultural products in India by economic value in 2009 Included in the table is the average productivity of India s farms for each produce For context and comparison included is the average of the most productive farms in the world and name of country where the most productive farms existed in 2010 The table suggests India has large potential for further accomplishments from productivity increases in increased agricultural output and agricultural incomes 69 70 Largest agricultural products in India by value 71 72 Rank Commodity Value US 2016 Unit price US kilogram 2009 Average yield tonnes per hectare 2017 Most productive country tonnes per hectare 2017 1 Rice 70 18 billion 0 27 3 85 9 82 Australia 2 Buffalo milk 43 09 billion 0 4 2 00 73 2 00 73 India 3 Cow milk 32 55 billion 0 31 1 2 73 10 3 73 Israel 4 Wheat 26 06 billion 0 15 2 8 8 9 Netherlands 5 Cotton Lint Seeds 23 30 billion 1 43 1 6 4 6 Israel 6 Mangoes guavas 14 52 billion 0 6 6 3 40 6 Cape Verde 7 Fresh Vegetables 11 87 billion 0 19 13 4 76 8 United States 8 Chicken meat 9 32 billion 0 64 10 6 20 2 Cyprus 9 Potatoes 8 23 billion 0 15 19 9 44 3 United States 10 Banana 8 13 billion 0 28 37 8 59 3 Indonesia 11 Sugar cane 7 44 billion 0 03 66 125 Peru 12 Maize 5 81 billion 0 42 1 1 5 5 Nicaragua 13 Oranges 5 62 billion 14 Tomatoes 5 50 billion 0 37 19 3 55 9 China 15 Chick peas 5 40 billion 0 4 0 9 2 8 China 16 Okra 5 25 billion 0 35 7 6 23 9 Israel 17 Soybeans 5 13 billion 0 26 1 1 3 7 Turkey 18 Hen eggs 4 64 billion 2 7 0 1 73 0 42 73 Japan 19 Cauliflower and Broccoli 4 33 billion 2 69 0 138 73 0 424 73 Thailand 20 Onions 4 05 billion 0 21 16 6 67 3 Ireland In 2019 as per Food and Agriculture Organization Corporate Statistical Database FAOSTAT data India produces various agriculture products in following values 74 FAOSTAT data for India 2019 Item Value in tonnes Apples 2 316 000 Bananas 30 460 000 Beans green 725 998 Cashew nuts with shell 743 000 Castor oil seed 1 196 680 Cauliflowers and broccoli 9 083 000 Cherries 11 107 Chick peas 9 937 990 Chillies and peppers dry 1 743 000 Chillies and peppers green 81 837 Coconuts 14 682 000 Coffee green 319 500 Cucumbers and gherkins 199 018 Garlic 2 910 000 Ginger 1 788 000 Grapes 3 041 000 Lemons and limes 3 482 000 Mangoes mangosteens guavas 25 631 000 Melons other inc cantaloupes 1 266 000 Mushrooms and truffles 182 000 Oilseeds nes 42 000 Onions dry 22 819 000 Oranges 9 509 000 Papayas 6 050 000 Pears 300 000 Pineapples 1 711 000 Potatoes 50 190 000 Rice paddy 177 645 000 Soybeans 13 267 520 Sugar cane 405 416 180 Sweet potatoes 1 156 000 Tea 1 390 080 Tobacco unmanufactured 804 454 Tomatoes 19 007 000 Watermelons 2 495 000 Wheat 103 596 230 In addition to growth in total output agriculture in India has shown an increase in average agricultural output per hectare in last 60 years The table below presents average farm productivity in India over three farming years for some crops Improving road and power generation infrastructure knowledge gains and reforms has allowed India to increase farm productivity between 40 and 500 over 40 years 24 India s recent accomplishments in crop yields while being impressive are still just 30 to 60 of the best crop yields achievable in the farms of developed as well as other developing countries Additionally despite these gains in farm productivity losses after harvest due to poor infrastructure and unorganised retail cause India to experience some of the highest food losses in the world Agriculture productivity in India growth in average yields from 1970 to 2010 in kilogram per hectare Crop 24 Average yield 1970 1971 Average yield 1990 1991 Average yield 2010 2011 75 Average yield 2019 76 Rice 1123 1740 2240 4057 7 Wheat 1307 2281 2938 3533 4 Pulses 524 578 689 441 3 Oilseeds 579 771 1325 1592 8 Sugarcane 48322 65395 68596 80104 5 Tea 1182 1652 1669 2212 8 Cotton 106 225 510 1156 6 Production of crop for various years in thousands of hectare 77 Crop 1961 1971 1981 1991 2001 2011 Rice 34694 34694 40708 4 42648 7 44900 44010 Wheat 12927 18240 5 22278 8 24167 1 25730 6 29068 6 Pulses 3592 2582 8 2388 2123 1 1650 1700 Oil seeds 486 453 3 557 5 557 5 716 7 1471 Sugar cane 2413 2615 2666 6 3686 4315 7 4944 39 Tea 331 229 358 675 384 242 421 504 600 Cotton 7719 7800 8057 4 7661 4 9100 12178 World s largest producer edit The Statistics Office of the Food and Agriculture Organization reported that per final numbers for 2009 India had grown to become the world s largest producer of the following agricultural products 78 79 Fresh fruit Lemons and limes Buffalo milk whole fresh Castor oil seeds Sunflower seeds Sorghum Millet Spices Okra Jute Beeswax Bananas Mangoes mangosteens guavas Pulses Indigenous buffalo meat Fruit tropical Ginger Chick peas Areca nuts Other bastfibres Pigeon peas Papayas Chillies and peppers dry Anise badian fennel coriander Goat milk whole fresh Per final numbers for 2009 India is the world s second largest producer of the following agricultural products 78 Wheat Rice Fresh vegetables Sugar cane Groundnuts with shell Lentils Garlic Cauliflowers and broccoli Peas green Sesame seed Cashew nuts with shell Silk worm cocoons reelable Cow milk whole fresh Tea Potatoes Onions Cotton lint Cotton seed Eggplants aubergines Nutmeg mace and cardamoms Indigenous goat meat Cabbages and other brassicas Pumpkins squash and gourds In 2009 India was the world s third largest producer of eggs oranges coconuts tomatoes peas and beans 78 India and China are competing to establish the world record on rice yields Yuan Longping of China National Hybrid Rice Research and Development Centre set a world record for rice yield in 2010 at 19 tonnes per hectare in a demonstration plot In 2011 this record was surpassed by an Indian farmer Sumant Kumar with 22 4 tonnes per hectare in Bihar also in a demonstration plot These farmers claim to have employed newly developed rice breeds and system of rice intensification SRI a recent innovation in farming The claimed Chinese and Indian yields have yet to be demonstrated on 7 hectare farm lots and that these are reproducible over two consecutive years on the same farm 80 81 82 83 Horticulture edit The total production and economic value of horticultural produce such as fruits vegetables and nuts has doubled in India over the 10 year period from 2002 to 2012 In 2012 the production from horticulture exceeded grain output for the first time The total horticulture produce reached 277 4 million metric tonnes in 2013 making India the second largest producer of horticultural products after China 84 Of this India in 2013 produced 81 million tonnes of fruits 162 million tonnes of vegetables 5 7 million tonnes of spices 17 million tonnes of nuts and plantation products cashew cacao coconut etc 1 million tonnes of aromatic horticulture produce and 1 7 million tonnes of flowers 7 6 billion cut flowers 85 86 Horticultural productivity in India 2013 Country 87 Area under fruits production million hectares 87 Average fruits yield metric tonnes per hectare 87 Area under vegetable production million hectares 87 Average vegetable yield metric tonnes per hectare 87 nbsp India 7 0 11 6 9 2 52 36 nbsp China 11 8 11 6 24 6 23 4 nbsp Spain 1 54 9 1 0 32 39 3 nbsp United States 1 14 23 3 1 1 32 5 World 57 3 11 3 60 0 19 7 During the 2013 fiscal year India exported horticulture products worth 14 365 crore US 1 8 billion nearly double the value of its 2010 exports 84 Along with these farm level gains the losses between farm and consumer increased and are estimated to range between 51 and 82 million metric tonnes a year Organic agriculture edit Organic agriculture has fed India for centuries and it is again a growing sector in India Organic production offers clean and green production methods without the use of synthetic fertilisers and pesticides and it achieves a premium price in the market place India has 6 50 000 organic producers which is more than any other country 88 India also has 4 million hectares of land certified as organic wildculture which is third in the world after Finland and Zambia 89 As non availability of edible biomass is impeding the growth of animal husbandry in India organic production of protein rich cattle fish and poultry feed using biogas methane natural gas by cultivating Methylococcus capsulatus bacteria with tiny land and water foot print is a solution for ensuring adequate protein rich food to the population 90 91 92 93 Agriculture based cooperatives edit nbsp Transporting harvested sugarcane in a field in Maharashtra India India has seen a huge growth in cooperative societies mainly in the farming sector since 1947 when the country gained independence from Britain The country has networks of cooperatives at the local regional state and national levels that assist in agricultural marketing The commodities that are mostly handled are food grains jute cotton sugar milk fruit and nuts 94 Support by the state government led to more than 25 000 cooperatives being set up by the 1990s in the state of Maharashtra 95 Sugar industry edit Most of the sugar production in India takes place at mills owned by local cooperative societies 67 The members of the society include all farmers small and large supplying sugarcane to the mill 96 Over the last fifty years the local sugar mills have played a crucial part in encouraging political participation and as a stepping stone for aspiring politicians 97 This is particularly true in the state of Maharashtra where a large number of politicians belonging to the Congress party or NCP had ties to sugar cooperatives from their local area and has created a symbiotic relationship between the sugar factories and local politics 98 However the policy of profits for the company but losses to be borne by the government has made a number of these operations inefficient 99 95 Marketing edit As with sugar cooperatives play a significant part in the overall marketing of fruit and vegetables in India Since the 1980s the amount of produce handled by Cooperative societies has increased exponentially Common fruit and vegetables marketed by the societies include bananas mangoes grapes onions and many others 100 Dairy industry edit nbsp The Banas Dairy Plant in Faridabad Haryana Dairy farming based on the Amul Pattern with a single marketing cooperative is India s largest self sustaining industry and its largest rural employment provider Successful implementation of the Amul model has made India the world s largest milk producer 101 Here small marginal farmers with a couple or so heads of milch cattle queue up twice daily to pour milk from their small containers into the village union collection points The milk after processing at the district unions is then marketed by the state cooperative federation nationally under the Amul brand name India s largest food brand With the Anand pattern three fourth of the price paid by the mainly urban consumers goes into the hands of millions of small dairy farmers who are the owners of the brand and the cooperative 102 Banking and rural credit edit Cooperative banks play a great part in providing credit in rural parts of India Just like the sugar cooperatives these institutions serve as the power base for local politicians 95 Problems edit nbsp District wise agricultural productivity in India 2003 05 Productivity varies highly across regions nbsp Spices at a store at Khari Baoli Old Delhi Farmers with limited marketing options sell their surplus produce nbsp India lacks cold storage food packaging and a safe and efficient rural transport system This causes one of the world s highest food spoilage rates particularly during monsoons and other adverse weather conditions Consumers buy agricultural produce in suburban markets such as the one shown or from roadside vendors nbsp Indian agriculture includes a mix of traditional to modern farming techniques In some parts of India traditional use of cattle to plough remains in use Traditional farms have some of the lowest per capita productivities and farmer incomes nbsp Since 2002 India has become the world s largest manufacturer of tractors with 29 of world s output in 2013 it is also the world s largest tractor market 103 104 Above a tractor in Rewari Haryana Slow agricultural growth is a concern for policymakers as some two thirds of India s people depend on rural employment for a living Current agricultural practices are neither economically nor environmentally sustainable and India s yields for many agricultural commodities are low Poorly maintained irrigation systems and almost universal lack of good extension services are among the factors responsible Farmers access to markets is hampered by poor roads rudimentary market infrastructure and excessive regulation World Bank India Country Overview 2008 105 With a population of just over 1 3 billion India is the world s largest democracy In the past decade the country has witnessed accelerated economic growth emerged as a global player with the world s fourth largest economy in purchasing power parity terms and made progress towards achieving most of the Millennium Development Goals India s integration into the global economy has been accompanied by impressive economic growth that has brought significant economic and social benefits to the country Nevertheless disparities in income and human development are on the rise Preliminary estimates suggest that in 2009 10 the combined all India poverty rate was 32 compared to 37 in 2004 05 Going forward it will be essential for India to build a productive competitive and diversified agricultural sector and facilitate rural non farm entrepreneurship and employment Encouraging policies that promote competition in agricultural marketing will ensure that farmers receive better prices World Bank India Country Overview 2011 17 A 2003 analysis of India s agricultural growth from 1970 to 2001 by the Food and Agriculture Organization identified systemic problems in Indian agriculture For food staples the annual growth rate in production during the six year segments 1970 76 1976 82 1982 88 1988 1994 1994 2000 were found to be respectively 2 5 2 5 3 0 2 6 and 1 8 per annum Corresponding analyses for the index of total agricultural production show a similar pattern with the growth rate for 1994 2000 attaining only 1 5 per annum 106 The biggest problem of farmers is the low price for their farm produce A recent study showed that proper pricing based on energy of production and equating farming wages to Industrial wages may be beneficial for the farmers 107 Infrastructure edit India has very poor rural roads affecting timely supply of inputs and timely transfer of outputs from Indian farms Irrigation systems are inadequate leading to crop failures in some parts of the country because of lack of water In other areas regional floods poor seed quality and inefficient farming practices lack of cold storage and harvest spoilage cause over 30 of farmer s produce going to waste lack of organised retail and competing buyers thereby limiting Indian farmer s ability to sell the surplus and commercial crops The Indian farmer receives just 10 to 23 of the price the Indian consumer pays for exactly the same produce the difference going to losses inefficiencies and middlemen Farmers in developed economies of Europe and the United States receive 64 to 81 citation needed Productivity edit Although India has attained self sufficiency in food staples the productivity of its farms is below that of Brazil the United States France and other nations Indian wheat farms for example produce about a third of the wheat per hectare per year compared to farms in France Rice productivity in India was less than half that of China Other staples productivity in India is similarly low Indian total factor productivity growth remains below 2 per annum in contrast China s total factor productivity growths is about 6 per annum even though China also has smallholding farmers Several studies suggest India could eradicate its hunger and malnutrition and be a major source of food for the world by achieving productivity comparable with other countries citation needed By contrast Indian farms in some regions post the best yields for sugarcane cassava and tea crops 108 Crop yields vary significantly between Indian states Some states produce two to three times more grain per acre than others As the map shows the traditional regions of high agricultural productivity in India are the north west Punjab Haryana and Western Uttar Pradesh coastal districts on both coasts West Bengal and Tamil Nadu In recent years the states of Madhya Pradesh Jharkhand Chhattisgarh in central India and Gujarat in the west have shown rapid agricultural growth 109 The table compares the statewide average yields for a few major agricultural crops in India for 2001 2002 110 Crop 110 Average farm yield in Bihar Average farm yield in Karnataka Average farm yield in Punjab kilogram per hectare kilogram per hectare kilogram per hectare Wheat 2020 unknown 3880 Rice 1370 2380 3130 Pulses 610 470 820 Oil seeds 620 680 1200 Sugarcane 45510 79560 65300 Crop yields for some farms in India are within 90 of the best achieved yields by farms in developed countries such as the United States and in European Union No single state of India is best in every crop Tamil Nadu achieved highest yields in rice and sugarcane Haryana in wheat and coarse grains Karnataka in cotton Bihar in pulses while other states do well in horticulture aquaculture flower and fruit plantations These differences in agricultural productivity are a function of local infrastructure soil quality micro climates local resources farmer knowledge and innovations 110 The Indian food distribution system is highly inefficient Movement of agricultural produce is heavily regulated with inter state and even inter district restrictions on marketing and movement of agricultural goods 110 One study suggests Indian agricultural policy should best focus on improving rural infrastructure primarily in the form of irrigation and flood control infrastructure knowledge transfer of better yielding and more disease resistant seeds Additionally cold storage hygienic food packaging and efficient modern retail to reduce waste can improve output and rural incomes 110 The low productivity in India is a result of the following factors The average size of land holdings is very small less than 2 hectares and is subject to fragmentation due to land ceiling acts and in some cases family disputes Such small holdings are often over manned resulting in disguised unemployment and low productivity of labour Some reports claim smallholder farming may not be cause of poor productivity since the productivity is higher in China and many developing economies even though China smallholder farmers constitute over 97 of its farming population 111 A Chinese smallholder farmer is able to rent his land to larger farmers China s organised retail and extensive Chinese highways are able to provide the incentive and infrastructure necessary to its farmers for sharp increases in farm productivity Adoption of modern agricultural practices and use of technology is inadequate in comparison with Green Revolution methods and technologies hampered by ignorance of such practices high costs and impracticality in the case of small land holdings According to the World Bank Indian branch s Priorities for Agriculture and Rural Development India s large agricultural subsidies are hampering productivity enhancing investment This evaluation is based largely on a productivity agenda and does not take any ecological implications into account According to a neo liberal view over regulation of agriculture has increased costs price risks and uncertainty because the government intervenes in labour land and credit markets India has inadequate infrastructure and services 112 The World Bank also says that the allocation of water is inefficient unsustainable and inequitable The irrigation infrastructure is deteriorating 112 The overuse of water is being covered by over pumping aquifers but as these are falling by one foot of groundwater each year this is a limited resource 113 The Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change released a report that food security may be a big problem in the region post 2030 114 Illiteracy general socio economic backwardness slow progress in implementing land reforms and inadequate or inefficient finance and marketing services for farm produce Inconsistent government policy Agricultural subsidies and taxes are often changed without notice for short term political ends Irrigation facilities are inadequate as revealed by the fact that only 52 6 of the land was irrigated in 2003 04 115 which result in farmers still being dependent on rainfall specifically the monsoon season A good monsoon results in a robust growth for the economy while a poor monsoon leads to a sluggish growth 116 Farm credit is regulated by NABARD which is the statutory apex agent for rural development in the subcontinent At the same time over pumping made possible by subsidised electric power is leading to an alarming drop in aquifer levels 117 118 119 A third of all food that is produced rots due to inefficient supply chains and the use of the Walmart model to improve efficiency is blocked by laws against foreign investment in the retail sector 120 Farmer suicides edit Main article Farmers suicides in India In 2012 the National Crime Records Bureau of India reported 13 754 farmer suicides 121 Farmer suicides account for 11 2 of all suicides in India 121 122 Activists and scholars have offered a number of conflicting reasons for farmer suicides such as monsoon failure high debt burdens genetically modified crops government policies public mental health personal issues and family problems 123 124 125 Marketing edit Agromarketing is poorly developed in India 126 Diversion of agricultural land for non agricultural purpose edit Indian National Policy for Farmers of 2007 127 stated that prime farmland must be conserved for agriculture except under exceptional circumstances provided that the agencies that are provided with agricultural land for non agricultural projects should compensate for treatment and full development of equivalent degraded or wastelands elsewhere The policy suggested that as far as possible land with low farming yields or that was not farmable should be earmarked for non agricultural purposes such as construction industrial parks and other commercial development 127 Amartya Sen offered a counter viewpoint stating that prohibiting the use of agricultural land for commercial and industrial development is ultimately self defeating 128 He stated that agricultural land may be better suited for non agriculture purposes if industrial production could generate many times more than the value of the product produced by agriculture 128 Sen suggested India needed to bring productive industry everywhere wherever there are advantages of production market needs and the locational preferences of managers engineers technical experts as well as unskilled labour because of education healthcare and other infrastructure He stated that instead of government controlling land allocation based on soil characteristics the market economy should determine productive allocation of land 128 Please check the validity of the source listed above Climate change edit This section is an excerpt from Climate change in India Reduced crop yields edit Climate Change in India will have a disproportionate impact on the more than 400 million that makeup India s poor community This is because so many depend on natural resources for their food shelter and income More than 56 of people in India work in agriculture while many others earn their living in coastal areas 129 The impact of climate change on Indian agriculture was investigated through the National Innovations in Climate Resilient Agriculture NICRA study The findings indicate that rainfed rice yields in India are expected to experience a marginal reduction of less than 2 5 in the years 2050 and 2080 On the other hand irrigated rice yields are projected to decline by 7 in 2050 and 10 in 2080 scenarios Moreover the study forecasts a decrease in wheat yield ranging from 6 to 25 in the year 2100 while maize yields are estimated to decrease by 18 to 23 during the same period However there is a potential positive impact on chickpea with anticipated productivity increases of 23 to 54 in the future climates 130 Initiatives edit nbsp Viticulture farms in Maharashtra nbsp Tea plantation in Tamil Nadu The required level of investment for the development of marketing storage and cold storage infrastructure is estimated to be huge The government has not been able to implement schemes to raise investment in marketing infrastructure Among these schemes are Construction of Rural Godowns Market Research and Information Network and Development Strengthening of Agricultural Marketing Infrastructure Grading and Standardisation 131 The Indian Council of Agricultural Research ICAR established in 1905 was responsible for the search leading to the Indian Green Revolution of the 1970s The ICAR is the apex body in agriculture and related allied fields including research and education 132 The Union Minister of Agriculture is the president of the ICAR The Indian Agricultural Statistics Research Institute develops new techniques for the design of agricultural experiments analyses data in agriculture and specialises in statistical techniques for animal and plant breeding citation needed Recently May 2016 the government of India has set up the Farmers Commission to completely evaluate the agriculture programme 133 Its recommendations have had a mixed reception citation needed In November 2011 India announced major reforms in organised retail These reforms would include logistics and retail of agricultural produce The announcement led to major political controversy The reforms were placed on hold by the government in December 2011 citation needed In the summer of 2012 the subsidised electricity for pumping which has caused an alarming drop in aquifer levels put additional strain on the country s electrical grid due to a 19 drop in monsoon rains and may have contributed to a blackout across much of the country In response the state of Bihar offered farmers over 100 million in subsidised diesel to operate their pumps 134 In 2015 Narendra Modi announced to double farmer s income by 2022 135 Startups with niche technology and new business models are working to solve problems in Indian agriculture and its marketing 136 Kandawale is one such e commerce website which sells Indian red onions to bulk users direct from farmers reducing unnecessary cost escalations Agriculture and Indian economy edit The contributions of agriculture in the Indian economy have been increasing over the years According to the economic survey the share of agriculture in gross domestic product GDP reached almost 20 for the first time in 17 years making a sole bright spot in performance during financial year 2020 2021 137 Modern farms and agriculture operations have changed over the years primarily because of advancements in technology including sensors devices machines and information technology 138 Personalized e commerce stores and market places have brought farming products like fertilizers seeds machines and equipment that help farmers grow quality products Educational portals let farmers know innovative things about farming that increase the contributions of agriculture to the economy 139 140 Organic farming edit Paramparagat Krishi Vikas Yojana PKVY was launched in 2015 by the Narendra Modi regime to promote organic farming under which farmers form organic farming clusters of 50 or more farmers with a minimum total area of 50 acres to share organic methods using traditional sustainable methods costs and marketing etc It initially aimed to have 10 000 clusters by 2018 with at least 500 000 acres under organic farming and government cover the certification costs and promote organic farming through the use of traditional resources Government provides INR 20 000 per acre benefit over three years 141 Other techniques of organic farming like zero budget natural farming ZBNF have been implemented by many small scale farmers in Wayanad Kerela In this process they implement more natural and ecological methods of farming that decrease or completely cease use of pesticides and damaging chemicals allievating the damage that Decades of overuse of chemicals and mono cropping and lack of management of soil fertility have depleted the formerly fertile forest land 142 in the area Along with progression with organic farming methods new technologies in the form of moisture sensors and artificial intelligence are also being implemented in the Indian farming sector Farmers are using moisture sensors to ensure that different crops have the exact amount of water that they need which ensures that farmers can maximise crop yield citation needed Along with this artificial intelligence techniques are being implemented in food processing plants across India where AI provides more efficient ways to produce harvest and sell crops products as well as an emphasis on checking defective crops and improving the potential for healthy crop production that further helps maximise crop yield as Rayda Ayed describes in her research on the impact of artificial intelligence in India 143 Government schemes edit This is a dynamic list and may never be able to satisfy particular standards for completeness You can help by adding missing items with reliable sources 2020 Indian agriculture acts Atal Bhujal Yojana E NAM for online agrimarketing Gramin Bhandaran Yojana for local storage Micro Irrigation Fund MIF National Mission For Sustainable Agriculture NMSA National Scheme on Fisheries Training and Extension National Scheme on Welfare of Fishermen Pradhan Mantri Kisan Samman Nidhi PMKSN for minimum support scheme Pradhan Mantri Krishi Sinchai Yojana PMKSY for irrigation Paramparagat Krishi Vikas Yojana PKVY for organic farming Pradhan Mantri Fasal Bima Yojana PMFBY for crop insuranceMaps edit nbsp Minor crop areas in India P pulses S sugarcane J jute Cn coconut C cotton and T tea nbsp Major crop areas in India nbsp Natural vegetation zones in IndiaSee also edit nbsp Agriculture and Agronomy portal 2020 Indian agriculture acts Agro climatic zones of India Animal husbandry in India Beekeeping in India Biotechnology in India Farming systems in India Fishing in 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journal help a b National Policy for Farmers 2007 Archived 24 August 2015 at the Wayback Machine a b c The Telegraph 23 July 2007 Prohibiting the use of agricultural land for industries is ultimately self defeating UNDP India and Climate Change Impacts Archived from the original on 17 March 2011 Retrieved 11 February 2010 Effect of Climate Change on Agriculture PIB GOV IN Retrieved 26 July 2023 Agriculture marketing india gov Retrieved in February 2008 Objectives Archived 24 October 2007 at the Wayback Machine Indian agricultural research institute Retrieved in December 2007 Farmers Commission Archived from the original on 11 May 2010 Retrieved 23 November 2009 Drought fears loom in India as monsoon stalls al Jazeera 5 August 2012 PM Modi Target to double farmers income by 2022 The Indian Express 28 February 2016 Tech in Asia Connecting Asia s startup ecosystem www techinasia com Retrieved 4 June 2016 Agri share in GDP hit 20 after 17 years Economic Survey www downtoearth org in Retrieved 28 March 2021 Agriculture Technology National Institute of Food and Agriculture nifa usda gov Retrieved 28 March 2021 Applying modern tech to agriculture www downtoearth org in Retrieved 28 March 2021 E Commerce for Ag Business Advantages and Challenges Penn State Extension Retrieved 28 March 2021 10 important government schemes for agriculture sector India today 30 August 2019 Munster Daniel March 2017 Zero Budget Natural Farming and Bovine Entanglements in South India RCC Perspectives Transformations in Environment and Society 1 25 32 doi 10 5282 RCC 7771 Ben Ayed Rayda Hanana Mohsen 22 April 2021 Artificial Intelligence to Improve the Food and Agriculture Sector Journal of Food Quality 2021 e5584754 doi 10 1155 2021 5584754 ISSN 0146 9428 Further reading editAgarwal Ankit 2011 Theory of Optimum Utilisation of Resources in agriculture during the Gupta Period permanent dead link History Today 12 New Delhi ISSN 2249 748X Akhilesh K B and Kavitha Sooda A Study on Impact of Technology Intervention in the Field of Agriculture in India in Smart Technologies Springer Singapore 2020 pp 373 385 Bhagowalia Priya S Kadiyala and D Headey Agriculture income and nutrition linkages in India Insights from a nationally representative survey 2012 online Bhan Suraj and U K Behera Conservation agriculture in India Problems prospects and policy issues International Soil and Water Conservation Research 2 4 2014 1 12 Bharti N 2018 Evolution of agriculture finance in India a historical perspective Agricultural Finance Review Vol 78 No 3 pp 376 392 https doi org 10 1108 AFR 05 2017 0035 Brink Lars Support to Agriculture in India in 1995 2013 and the Rules of the WTO International Agricultural Trade Research Consortium IATRC Working Paper 14 01 2014 online Brown Trent Farmers Subalterns and activists social politics of sustainable agriculture in India Cambridge University Press 2018 Chauhan Bhagirath Singh et al Global warming and its possible impact on agriculture in India in Advances in agronomy Academic Press 2014 pp 65 121 online dead link Chengappa P G Presidential Address Secondary Agriculture A Driver for Growth of Primary Agriculture in India Indian Journal of Agricultural Economics 68 902 2016 66819 2013 1 19 online Dev S Mahendra Srijit Mishra and Vijay Laxmi Pandey Agriculture in India Performance Challenges and Opportunities in A Concise Handbook of the Indian Economy in the 21st Century Oxford University Press 2014 pp 321 350 Goyal S amp Prabha amp Rai Dr amp Singh Shree Ram Indian Agriculture and Farmers Problems and Reforms 2016 Kekane Maruti Arjun Indian Agriculture Status Importance and Role in Indian Economy International Journal of Agriculture and Food Science Technology ISSN 2249 3050 Volume 4 Number 4 2013 pp 343 346 Kumar Anjani Krishna M Singh and Shradhajali Sinha Institutional credit to agriculture sector in India Status performance and determinants Agricultural Economics Research Review 23 2 2010 253 264 online Manida Mr M and G Nedumaran Agriculture In India Information About Indian Agriculture amp Its Importance Aegaeum Journal 8 3 2020 online Mathur Archana S Surajit Das and Subhalakshmi Sircar Status of agriculture in India trends and prospects Economic and political weekly 2006 5327 5336 online Nedumaran Dr G E Agriculture and Rural Development in India 2020 online Ramakumar R Large scale Investments in Agriculture in India IDS Bulletin 43 2012 92 103 online Ramakumar R Agriculture and the Covid 19 Pandemic An Analysis with Special Reference to India Review of Agrarian Studies 10 2369 2020 1856 2020 online Saradhi Byra Pardha et al Significant Trends in the Digital Transformation of Agriculture in India International Journal of Grid and Distributed Computing 13 1 2020 2703 2709 2 Sharma Shalendra D 1999 Development and Democracy in India Lynne Rienner Publishers pp 125 ISBN 978 1 55587 810 8 State of Indian Agriculture 2011 12 New Delhi Government of India Ministry of Agriculture Department of Agriculture and Cooperation March 2012External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Agriculture in India nbsp Wikiquote has quotations related to Agriculture in India Indian Agriculture U S Library of Congress Indian Agriculture Data Statistical information about Agriculture in India Government of India Ministry of Agriculture Department of Agriculture amp Cooperation website Indian Council for Agricultural Research Home Page Principal crops of India and problems with Indian agriculture A collection of statistics from India Statistical Report 2011 along with sections of this Wikipedia article and YouTube videos Brighter Green Policy Paper Veg or NonVeg India at a Crossroads A December 2011 policy paper analysing the forces behind the rising consumption and production of meat eggs and dairy products in India and the effects on India s people environment animals and the global climate Mukherji Biman 28 October 2013 India s farmers start to mechanise amid a labour shortage increasing productivity WSJ com Wall Street Journal Online wsj com Retrieved 30 October 2013 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Agriculture in India amp oldid 1211939088, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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