Shame of unpaid debt a key reason for farmer suicides, finds study
The
RBI-commissioned study listed faulty crop choices and aspirational
consumption patterns as other major factors for farmer suicides
http://www.livemint.com/Politics/8CRq8MTmfi2alHPhp2kG4O/Shame-of-debt-steep-costs-driving-farmers-to-suicide-RBIc.html
New Delhi: Shame arising out of inability to repay loans taken
from relatives and acquaintances is a key reason for farmers resorting
to suicide, a study commissioned by the Reserve Bank of India (RBI)
found.
The study titled “Lives in debt: narratives of agrarian distress and
farmer suicides”, conducted by researchers at Shiv Nadar University and
published in the latest issue of Economic and Political Weekly,
listed faulty crop choices, rising input costs, and aspirational
consumption patterns as other major factors driving suicides, following
field investigations in two of the most suicide-prone districts in
India—Yavatmal in Maharashtra and Sangrur in Punjab.
The findings
come at a time when a farm debt waiver in Uttar Pradesh has sparked
demand for similar relief in these two states. In Punjab, despite a
record harvest, farmer suicides have continued.
Despite formal
credit to farmers growing tenfold between 2001 and 2012, commercial
banks have “deepened” credit instead of “widening” it, making loans more
accessible to farmers with large landholdings, the study said, adding
that “it (the surge in formal credit) was insufficient to rule out the
predominance of non-institutional sources”.
Citing data from the
National Crime Records Bureau, the study observed that close to 270,000
farmers have committed suicide in the past 15 years, and despite wide
differences in cropping patterns and access to irrigation, the crisis in
farming is strikingly similar in districts like Yavatmal (rain-fed
cotton belt) and Sangrur (irrigated region growing three crops in a
year).
In Yavatmal, the survey showed that small and
marginal farmers (owning less than 2 hectares) who lacked non-farm
sources of income were most likely to commit suicide.
“The shame
associated with one’s inability to repay is immense in a village society
and it is all the more acute if money is borrowed from relatives,” the
study observed.
In Sangrur, the study found that most families
where a farmer suicide took place had outstanding debts over Rs200,000.
Many families were indebted to traders and commission agents and had
exhausted all formal credit channels, the study found.
It further
said that crop choices in these districts were not in tune with the
agro-climatic features of the region. Cultivation of Bt cotton in
Yavatmal where rainfall is unpredictable and growing rice in Sangrur
where water tables are depleting has put farmers under considerable
stress, according to the study.
The researchers observed that a Bt
cotton farmer is barely able to meet the rising costs of cultivation,
let alone generate a profit sufficient to sustain the household. In
Punjab, a highly input-intensive farming and low support prices that did
not keep pace with production costs have meant little surplus left with
farmers to repay loans.
While consumption expenditure of small
farmers usually exceeds their income from farming, the mismatch is
higher in Punjab, the study said, adding the state tops in purchase of
consumer durables often financed by loans form non-institutional
sources.
Due to massive defaults caused by repeated crop failures,
“the most frightening point emerging from the field study is the
exhausting of informal sources of credit” leading to a situation where
moneylenders prefer buying out assets of farmers than mortgaging them,
the study said.
It suggested several interventions, including
discouraging loans to crops not suited to the ecology of a region,
restructuring of loans into smaller instalments, and introduction of
cashless loan components to avoid diversion of loans towards consumption
expenditure, as possible measures to curb suicides.
Criticising
the pitifully low public expenditure on agriculture (less than 1% of the
GDP), the study said “an economy driven by jobless growth, compulsive
migration” (from rural India) creates new “serfs” in informal services
and construction, “while existing rural and agrarian problems remain
unresolved”.
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