CHENNAI
: The contentious issue of what we can do to help our farmers better their lot,
found a lot of answers during a discussion on What we need to do to make India
Incredible? at TNIE’S ThinkEdu Conclave 2019. The first panel of the day had
NITI Aayog’s Amitabh Kant in conversation with PMK MP and former Union
minister, Dr Anbumani Ramadoss trading ideas.
Perhaps
the most candid and hard hitting one came from Amitabh Kant, who said, “My
belief is that agriculture requires a lot of technology in India - the first
green revolution was a result of that. Indian needs cold storages, warehousing
and scrapping of the APMC Act to allow markets to work. (Currently) Markets
don’t work,” responding to a question from a delegate on why India lags behind
in produce per hectare when compared to a country like Israel.
Kant
took it a notch higher and upped the honesty quotient, when he said, “It’s not
about education. There has to be political will by politicians like Mr Ramadoss
and many more to allow markets to function so that producers get the right
price. We have constrained our farmers too much by too many controls and that
needs to be stopped,” he said.

Ramadoss,
who had done a lot of grassroot work with the farmers in his constituency, said
that if the right price was paid for the farmer’s produce, he wouldn’t need any
sops. “We need to respect farmers and give them their due. Somewhere the MSP
has gone wrong, there is a huge gap between the produce and the price set by
the government. He just needs the right price, not sops,” he said.
“India
produces the second highest amount of milk in the world, but less than 1 per
cent is exported,” he said, pointing out the lack of proper storage
facilities.Pointing out that Tamil Nadu’s tag of ‘most urbanised State in the
country’ is because of high migration to the cities in search of jobs, Anbumani
said that he would not consider it a sign of development. “Reverse migration is
a sign of development for me,” he said, claiming that it would be possible only
if the government makes agriculture a viable profession.
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