[The clash of interests between the agricultural labourers and the farmers,
as sellers and purchasers of labour, is often brushed under the carpet by
the organised political forces - including the Left; the former is
projected as only a subset of the latter - considerably more numerous and
socially more powerful, just not as employers but also because of the,
usually, higher caste status - OBC/middle castes vis-a-vis Dalits.

This aspect deserves being underlined.

《The MGNREGA was one of the most ambitious attempts at fighting mass
poverty in post-Independence India — it consisted in paying 100 days of
minimum wages to any rural family affected by joblessness. Under Manmohan
Singh, the state devoted large amounts of money to the MGNREGA, which
represented upto 0.6 per cent of the Indian GDP. Not only did this
programme directly benefit millions of poor, it also indirectly helped an
even larger number by pushing up the rural minimum salary which increased
from Rs 65 a day in 2005 to Rs 162 a day. The average growth rate of rural
revenue jumped from 2.7 per cent per year in 1999-2004 to 9.7 per cent in
2006-2011.
This is one of the reasons why the BJP appears to consider the MGNREGA not
good for the country, because it increased the cost of one of the
agricultural inputs — labour, making food more expensive for the core of
the party’s electorate, the urban middle class and the “neo middle class”.
The other reason why the BJP held the MGNREGA as a bad scheme, besides its
assumption that the future was in the factories, was the way it assisted
rural folk, giving them money even when there was no work to do, especially
in the case of drought. In 2015, during the first budget session, PM Modi
declared: “I will keep NREGA alive. I may not have your experience, but all
of you will grant me political skills and that acumen has told me to keep
it alive as a monument to your failures since Independence. After 60 years,
you are still making people dig holes”.》]

https://indianexpress.com/article/opinion/columns/farmers-protests-delhi-farmers-protests-mumbai-mgnrega-farmers-loans-and-others-5482210/?fbclid=IwAR2dbNwtx-BIDHZ4R3Xn8Nx-ALgJ95QwPhX_obonKNhmoo4Vb__3ll4odwc

Farmers and others
Will the kisan take care of interests of landless peasants as well?

Written by Christophe Jaffrelot |

Updated: December 7, 2018 12:06:00 am

Farmers protest at Parliament street for their demands in New Delhi.
(Express photo by Praveen Khanna)

In the aftermath of the demonstrations by farmers in the name of
agricultural prices and loan waiving, it is important to remember that
village India also comprises of landless peasants who have nothing to sell
on the market and have never gone to a bank. Their condition has
deteriorated, too, as a result not only of the agricultural crisis
affecting the farmers, their employers, but also of the fate of the Mahatma
Gandhi National Rural Employment Guarantee Act (MGNREGA) that UPA 1
initiated in 2005.

The recent “Delhi chalo” movement calls to mind the peasant politics of the
1970s-’80s, when the farmers that Professors Susanne and Lloyd Rudolph
called “bullock capitalists”, claimed to represent all kisans. In contrast
to the “tractor capitalists” who owned more than 15 acres large holdings,
the “bullock capitalists” owned only 2.5 to 15 acres, but that was
sufficient to have something to sell and to prosper. Their good fortune was
partly due to their sense of organisation and their capacity of
mobilisation — that became evident in 1978 when hundreds of thousands of
them came to Delhi to celebrate the birthday of their main leader, Charan
Singh. This strength allowed them to obtain from the state remunerative
prices for agricultural commodities and subsidies (regarding fertilisers
and electricity, for instance).

Such strength came from the fact that they were able to subsume class
politics in rural India and rally other sections of society. Charan Singh
emphasised the opposition between the urban and the rural, between “India”
and “Bharat”, as if they formed two blocks, sidelining social
differentiations in terms of caste and class within village India. Singh
claimed that he was representing all the “kisans”. He paid no attention to
the landless labourers who worked in the fields of others. In that sense,
“the new agrarianism” which emerged in the 1960-’70s was a form of
populism, as DN Dhanagare argued convincingly. This brand of populism
continued to prevail under the aegis of the Bharatiya Kisan Union and
culminated in 1989 when peasants camped in Delhi for days.

However, it was already more and more difficult to get benefits for the
peasants. Since the 1990s, partly because of economic liberalisation,
subsidies have declined and farmers have lost out to urban India — hence
their recent mobilisations. But the losers are not the “bullock
capitalists” only. At the receiving end, are also the landless peasants,
who number about 300 million. No mainstream party ever considered land
redistribution to be a solution to landlessness. Lately, industrialisation
has been presented as the most promising way forward. Supporting the BJP’s
amendments to the Land Acquisition Act, Arun Jaitley declared in 2015 that
this reform would result in “industrial corridors” thanks to which “300
million landless people would get employment opportunities.” This tall
order has clear implications for village India. In the first place, if the
landless peasants have to leave their village, there is no need to help
them to live there. Hence the fate of the MGNREGA.

The MGNREGA was one of the most ambitious attempts at fighting mass poverty
in post-Independence India — it consisted in paying 100 days of minimum
wages to any rural family affected by joblessness. Under Manmohan Singh,
the state devoted large amounts of money to the MGNREGA, which represented
upto 0.6 per cent of the Indian GDP. Not only did this programme directly
benefit millions of poor, it also indirectly helped an even larger number
by pushing up the rural minimum salary which increased from Rs 65 a day in
2005 to Rs 162 a day. The average growth rate of rural revenue jumped from
2.7 per cent per year in 1999-2004 to 9.7 per cent in 2006-2011.

This is one of the reasons why the BJP appears to consider the MGNREGA not
good for the country, because it increased the cost of one of the
agricultural inputs — labour, making food more expensive for the core of
the party’s electorate, the urban middle class and the “neo middle class”.
The other reason why the BJP held the MGNREGA as a bad scheme, besides its
assumption that the future was in the factories, was the way it assisted
rural folk, giving them money even when there was no work to do, especially
in the case of drought. In 2015, during the first budget session, PM Modi
declared: “I will keep NREGA alive. I may not have your experience, but all
of you will grant me political skills and that acumen has told me to keep
it alive as a monument to your failures since Independence. After 60 years,
you are still making people dig holes”.

Is VHP’s Ayodhya mobilisation bringing back fears of the 1992 Babri
demolition?
In other words, Modi — who had already declared in 2014, during his first
speech before the Lok Sabha, that he wanted to serve “the poorest of the
poor” — was saying in 2015 that he did not like the MGNREGA, but that he
knew it was popular and that its termination would be badly received in the
countryside. Therefore, on paper, the programme remained the same. In 2015,
Arun Jaitley even declared: “Our government is committed to supporting
employment through MGNREGA. We will ensure that no one who is poor is left
without employment”.

But the funds that had been allocated to the MGNREGA were not disbursed. In
2016, the Supreme Court had to intervene. But the downward trend continued.
The number of people who have worked 100 days a year dropped from 4,70,000
in 2013-14 to 1,70,000 in 2015-16. As early as 2014-15, the average number
of days worked had dropped to 39 (it was 46 the year before). Not only had
the magical figure of “100 days” evaporated, but workers were not paid
within 15 days, as they should be, according to the MGNREGA. Only 28 per
cent have been paid on time in 2016-17, at a time when demonetisation had
made their life even more difficult and drought was affecting parts of
India. In 2015-16, when droughts were much more severe, only 7 per cent of
the agricultural laborers benefited from the drought-related special clause
of the MGNREGA specifying that, in such circumstances, the “100 days”
should be converted to “150 days”. The money spent in the framework of this
scheme has been reduced to 0.26 per cent of the Indian GDP in 2016-17.

Landless peasants are probably, along with Adivasis and farmers, the main
victims of the present agricultural crisis. Will the kisan take care of
their interests as well, or will they look at them as parts of a different
world, in terms of class and caste — as many of them are Dalits? The
response will be a function of the intensity of the local conflicts within
the peasantry — and of the intensity of rural distress.

-- 
Peace Is Doable

-- 
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups 
"Green Youth Movement" group.
To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email 
to greenyouth+unsubscr...@googlegroups.com.
To post to this group, send an email to greenyouth@googlegroups.com.
Visit this group at https://groups.google.com/group/greenyouth.
For more options, visit https://groups.google.com/d/optout.

Reply via email to