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Ordie
03-24-2008, 03:35 AM
India's debt-ridden farmers committing suicide

Jason Motlagh, Chronicle Foreign Service
Saturday, March 22, 2008
http://imgs.sfgate.com/c/pictures/2008/03/22_t/mn_india_farmers_t.gif (http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/object/article?f=/c/a/2008/03/22/MN8MV9DET.DTL&o=0&type=printable) http://imgs.sfgate.com/c/pictures/2008/03/22_t/mn_india_map_t.gif (http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/object/article?f=/c/a/2008/03/22/MN8MV9DET.DTL&o=1&type=printable)




(03-22) 04:00 PDT Nashik, India -- On a recent afternoon, Seetabai Atthre heard a faint cry from the edge of a vineyard that her family has cultivated for more than 40 years. Through the furrows, she found her husband, Vishal, smoldering on the ground next to an empty can of kerosene. He had lit himself on fire and died three days later in a local hospital.
Atthre attributes her husband's suicide to a $5,600 debt. The farm located on the arid plains of northern Maharashtra state near the town of Nashik had not turned a profit in more than two years, and 65-year-old Vishal could no longer secure a bank loan to pay off interest on the debt.
"This is wrong, and it's killing us," Sanjay Gangode said at a gathering of debt-ridden grape farmers in the region. "There is no future here."
While India's economy surges forward on the crest of globalization, thousands of farmers are taking their own lives every year to escape mounting debt and an uncertain future. According to the National Crime Records Bureau, at least 87,567 farmers committed suicide between 2002 and 2006. In Maharashtra state, there were 4,453 suicides in 2006, the last year for which statistics were made available, an increase of 527 compared with 2005. Sharp increases have also been reported in Andhra Pradesh and Chhattisgarh states.
Last year, Prime Minister Manmohan Singh pledged more than $930 million in relief to bail out struggling Maharashtra farmers and "relieve the misery."
Possible causes of suicides

Analysts cite several factors for the suicides, including crop failure due to agrochemicals and climate change, lower prices due to U.S. farm subsidies, state restrictions on export trade, and the dumping of surplus crops in an oversaturated domestic market.
"The phenomena of indebtedness will recur as long as policies to depress agricultural prices continue," said Sharad Joshi, founder of Shetkari Sanghatana, a leading farmers' rights organization.
Ironically, many farmers are facing a backlash of their own remarkable transformation.
In the 1960s, India underwent a green revolution in favor of high-yield farming to counter acute food shortages. Plant breeding, irrigation development and the use of synthetic fertilizers ramped up production. Today, India is a major exporter of rice, and the world's second-largest producer of fruits and vegetables after the United States.
The changes caused higher operating costs and production that created a market glut exceeding demand at home and abroad. To remain in business, many farmers were forced to take out loans at high interest rates. Once credit had been exhausted, they turned to private lenders, who charged even more exorbitant interest rates.
And that's when the suicides started, most activists say.
"Suicide has become so common that no one takes it seriously anymore," said Giridhar Patil, an agricultural activist in Nashik.
Like Napa Valley

About a four-hour drive northeast of Mumbai, formerly Bombay, the agrarian communities around Nashik boast a Napa Valley-like mild climate and rich soil. Fruit stands and onion warehouses line a highway that wends through a quiltwork of vineyards under a cloudless horizon. Despite the ideal growing conditions, 53 farmers committed suicide in Nashik district last year, according to police records. In an ironically tragic gesture, the majority drank pesticides.
In Umbarkhad, a small village located less than a mile from the Atthre farm, Parshram Athari plies the 5-acre grape farm where he grew up. At first glance, he and his family of five appear to be prosperous: A two-story concrete home with a satellite dish overlooks the property; the vineyard is hedged and well-irrigated, tended by day laborers who carefully pack export-quality grapes into stamped cardboard boxes. Athari is also paying 12 percent interest on a $17,500 loan.
About 15 years ago, his farm produced 26,000 pounds of grapes per acre. These days, an acre yields about 11,000 pounds, and production costs have quadrupled. A hefty share is spent on fertilizers, whose harsh chemicals deplete soil nutrients, making it more difficult to regroup when a crop is lost to drought. A tractor sits idle, a rusty relic from better days. Athari also worries that he won't have enough money to send his eldest daughter to a good university or pay for her dowry when she marries.
"The (laborers) we employ are better off than we are today," said Athari, who says he now has only $200 a month to cover household expenses. "Our costs are going up and market prices are going down, so we don't have enough to make ends meet."
The same grapes he sells to wholesalers for 30 cents per 2.2 pounds can fetch as high as $2.50 in a Dubai supermarket. The price imbalance is made worse if domestic prices rise, he adds, since the Indian government then bans exports, reducing potential profit and flooding the domestic market, which knocks prices down even more.
Such price volatility is a function of globalization, most critics say - and is especially unstable for cotton farmers. As the world's largest cotton producer, the United States provides massive subsidies that allow American farmers to undercut overseas competition by selling at an artificially low cost.
Moreover, many Indian farmers are now using genetically engineered Bt cotton seeds made by U.S.-based Monsanto Co., which produce higher yields. The seeds and fertilizer, however, must be bought each year, costing farmers thousands of dollars.
Debt waiver proposal

Not surprisingly, debt-ridden farmers have mobilized to support a debt waiver proposal that is floating around congress. Mohan Dharia, a former commerce minister turned social activist, threatened a nationwide protest this month if demands for fairer crop prices were not enacted by the end of the month.
"Political parties can ignore farmers at their own peril," he said.
The threat of widespread protests ended after Finance Minister P. Chidambaram announced a $15 billion aid package for "small and marginal farmers" who owe money to state banks.
Nevertheless, many critics say Indian farmers need a long-term solution, not a one-time bail out.
"The government knows we will take out more loans in the end and fall in the same trap," said Nivruti Dokhale, a Nashik onion farmer who is $8,000 in debt.
Chronicle Foreign Service reporter Jason Motlagh visited Maharashtra state in February on a grant sponsored by the Pulitzer Center on Crisis Reporting in Washington.

Source:http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?file=/c/a/2008/03/22/MN8MV9DET.DTL&type=printable

MG 3
03-24-2008, 06:27 AM
This is why economic booms in poor countries do not work out. The vast majority is left out and one fine day we find ourselves at the same intersection of desolation again.

Nick Balmer
03-24-2008, 07:46 AM
Hello,

This is just the continuation of a truely terrible situation that has existed for many years. I was in the Wynanad a few hundred miles south of Nasik two years ago, and whilst there I was travelling with a local journalist from Sultan Bathory who was telling me how many farmers were comiting suicide because the price of the pepper, cardoman, grain and rice they grew was so low, and the cost of transportation so high that they could not compete with foriegn farmers.

Their former markets in cities on the coast, only a hundred or so miles away are virtually inaccessible because of the appalling roads, whilst at the same time rice is cheaper to import by boat from Madagascar or America.

I believe that these farmers will continue to suffer until the price of grain rises. At present most third world (and indeed first world) farmers get paid too little for their crops.

Whilst this is contrary to most opinion, I believe that the development of biofuels markets in the States, that is driving up the price of grain on the world markets, could eventually be seen as the turning point for many currently desparate farmers, because at last the first world will stop dumping grains onto the world markets, destroying the local farming markets.

I appreciate that for the urban poor, the consequent increases in food grain prices might have terrible consequences in the short term, but if farming paid once again, then these poor would not have had to flee to the slums, they could have remained in their villages.

Regards

Nick

homegrowncat
03-24-2008, 09:01 AM
as someone who grew up on a livestock and cropping operation in the west, this quote from the story "lower prices due to U.S. farm subsidies" does nothing but piss me off.

If someone took 30 seconds to learn about American agriculture policy they would know they any "subsidies" are based on price. The current counter-cyclical payment (CCP) is based on price. Right now, beause prices for commodities are so how in the United States no CCP is being offered.

All the woos of global agricultre seemed to get balmed on American agriculture. Maybe gloabl agriculture should take a look at itself.

Indian farmers committing sucide, yes, I have sarrow for their families, but maybe they should not take a loan from a loan shark with such a high interest rate they can't pay the loan back. I believe Taxes Tech has some great research on this.

If the toplis is "subsidies" they look at how American agriculture gives the world a subsidy. American farmers pay hundreds of dollars for seed and seed technology from companies like Dupont, Pioneer, Sygenta and Monsanto, but farmers in Africa and South America can purpuse this same seed and seed technology for pennies because the American farmers has already paid for research.

American agriculture is easy to pick on because of the "aw-shucks" attitude we have. But it is easy to pick on us and blame the woos of other countries on us when their mouths are full or the food.

gaijinsamurai
03-24-2008, 09:06 AM
It is a terrible situation these farmers are in, and I wish them the best.

a_very_ex_STAB
03-24-2008, 12:40 PM
This has been going on for quite a long time. They are being killed by capitalism just as surely as if they were lined up in front of a ditch and shot in the back of the head.

Saranof
03-24-2008, 03:22 PM
If the "Fair Trade" products weren't so annoylingly markteted (Much like the new Xtreme Climate awareness) I might buy the stuff