- What is cooperative Farming?
- Why Cooperative farming?
- India towards Cooperative Farming
- Cooperative Farming vs Five Year Plans
- Cooperative Farming: Limitations/Epicfail
What is cooperative Farming?
Cooperative farming refers to an organisation in which:
- each member-farmer remains the owner of his land individually.
- But farming is done jointly.
- Profit is distributed among the member-farmers in the ratio of land owned by them.
- Wages distributed among the member-farmers according to number of days they worked.
In other words, Cooperative farming= pooling of land and practicing joint agriculture. Cooperative farming is not a new concept in India. Since ancient times, Indian farmers have been giving mutual aid to each other in weeding, harvesting etc. Examples
Traditional Cooperative Farming System | Region |
Phad | Kolhapur |
Gallashi | Andhra |
Why Cooperative farming?
Because it gives following benefits/advantages/potential:
- Economies of scale:
- As the size of farm increases, the per hectare cost of using tube-well, tractor comes down.
- Small farms=some land is wasted in forming the âboundariesâ among them. When theyâre combined into a big cooperative farm, we can also cultivate on that boundary land.
- overall, Large farms are economically more beneficial than small farms.
- Solves the problem of sub-division and fragmentation of holdings.
- Cooperative farm has more men-material-money resources to increase irrigation potential and land productivity. Members would not have been able to do it individually on their small farm.
- Case studies generally point out that with cooperative farming, per acre production increases.
India towards Cooperative Farming
before independence |
|
Bombay Planâ44 |
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Cooperative Planning Committeeâ45 |
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Economic Program committeeâ47 | headed by Nehru. Recommended that:
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Congress Agrarian Reforms Committeeâ49 | headed by Kumarappa recommended that:
So, this is the first time, someone suggested the State to use âCompulsionâ to promote cooperatives. |
Cooperative Farming vs Five Year Plans
First Five Year Plan (1951-56)
- Apart from Cooperative farming, it also recommended ‘Cooperative Village Management’ as a more comprehensive solution for rural development.
- Encourage small and middle farmers to form cooperative farming societies
- If majority of farmers agreed to start cooperative farming, then decision will be binding on the entire village.
- But did not talk about giving enforcement powers to States.
- Result? ~2000 cooperative farming societies formed during the First Plan period.
Second Five Year Plan (1956-61)
- 1956: Indian delegations sent to China to study their cooperative farming. Recommended this system in to increase food grain production.
- Develop cooperative farming as soon as possible.
- Target: Setup atleast one cooperative farm in every National Extension Block, or about 5000 for the whole country.
- Hoped to convert substantial proportion of Indian farms into cooperative farming by a period of ten years.
Nagpur resolution of Congress, 1959
- Cooperative farming will be the the future agrarian pattern of India.
- farmers will continue to retain their property rights
- but their land will be pooled for joint cultivation.
- Farmers will get a share in the profit, in proportion to their land.
- Further, those who actually work on the land, will get wages, in proportion of their work-contribution (irrespective of whether they own the land or not.) = in other words, cooperative farming will give employment to landless labourers also. In a way, this was a solution to the #epicfail of land ceiling (because so far governments could not takeover the surplus land from big farmers and redistribute it among landless laborers).
- Start cooperatives related to agro-credit, marketing, seeds-fertilizer etc. Finish this stage within 3 years. Then focus entirely on cooperative farming.
Epicfail of Nagpur resolution
After Nagpur resolution, Many people inside and outside congress, opposed the idea.
who? | said what? |
|
|
Nehru (clarifies in Parliament) | weâre not going to make any law/act to coerce anyone to start cooperative farming. |
- Later Chinese attack on Tibet and India. Critiques start pointing out how Nehruâs policies are hurting India.
- Recall, earlier we sent delegations to China, to study their cooperative farming system. But now there is Anti-China mood in press and public. Hence, gradually Congress gives up the idea of cooperative farming.
Third Plan (1961-66)
- Observed that nearly 40% of the cooperative farms are not functioning properly.
- Advocated better implementation of community development program, credit societies, agri-marketing etc. for getting success in cooperative farming.
- ~300 pilot projects in selected district. Each project having 10 cooperative societies.
- Overall, Third Five year plan tried to put a brave face, again reaffirming the governmentâs faith in cooperative farming, but overall, wishful platitude not a plan of action.
Fourth Five Year Plan (1969-74)
- Observed that cooperative farming programs have not made any substantial progress.
- (therefore) It is not been possible to propose any additional programmes for cooperative farming in this Plan
- Instead, we should focus on development of agricultural credit, marketing, processing and consumer needs.
- In co-operative farming, funding priority only for revitalizing of the existing weak societies.
- But avoid setting up new cooperative farming societies, unless they have a potential for growth.
So, overall we can see that by early 70s, Planning commissionâs faith/interest in cooperative farming is vanishing.
Fifth Five Year Plan (1974-79)
- Made no mention of cooperative farming.
- It did allot some ca$H under the heading “Cooperation”, but it was only meant for inter-farm co-operative service facilities e.g. seed-fertilizer-water supply, use of tractors/agro-machineries etc.
After this era, five year plans give more attention (and ca$H) to wasteland management, poverty removal etc. and cooperative farming loses its relevance.
Cooperative Farming: Limitations/Epicfail
Miscalculations and false hopes
Early planners and policymakers had hoped that
- Village panchayat and (Congress) party workers will help implementing cooperative farming, but response was lukewarm.
- Cooperative farming = government will have to spend less money on agriculture (+less leakage in subsidies). But the scenario didnât change.
- During 2nd FYP, the National Development Council proposed that in the next five years agricultural production be increased by 25-35% via cooperative farming. But most state government shied away from taking necessary initiatives.
Bogus farms and apathetic bureaucrats
by and large Cooperative farming societies fell into two categories:
Type#1: by big farmers = bogus farms
- Theyâd setup bogus cooperative farms by showing agri.labourers/tenants as bogus members. But in reality none of them owned the land individually.
- this was done to evade land ceiling and tenancy reform laws.
- Adding insult to the injury: government even gave them subsidies for seeds, fertilizers etc.
- At times, non-working members had been enrolled in order to fulfil the minimum requirements of registration.
- Even in legit/genuine cooperative farming societies, the rich farmers dominate the management positions.
- Sometimes societies setup with members of just one or two families to get various subsidies/support.
Type#2: by State sponsorship= apathetic bureaucrats
- State sponsored cooperative farms as part of pilot projects under FYP.
- Government would allot land to the landless, SC/ST, Displaced persons etc.
- but they did not get adequate support from government agencies for irrigation, electricity, seeds-fertilizer, extension services etc.
- these farms were run like government-sponsored projects rather than genuine, motivated, joint efforts of the cultivators. Result? These experiments were unsuccessful. No gain in productivity.
- Later, those farmers started cultivating land individual (though on papers, the land continued to be owned by the âcooperative societiesâ.)
#Epicfail in Bihar:
- Cooperative farming societies were formed on Bhoodan land- for the landless labourers.
- But later, they started individual farming, although officially the land still continues to be in the name of the societies.
Free riders
- Some member-farmers become lazy, thinking why bother when weâll get the same amount of profit in proportion of the land owned. Just like those free-rider students in MBA/Engineering College who do not contribute anything for the powerpoint projects yet get full credits/marks for being member of the group.
- This demotivated sincere farmers from working hard on such cooperative farms.
- + Entry of idiots with political patronage and caste affiliations entering in cooperative farming activities, with their own vested interests.
- Ultimately, nobody takes interest in the actual farming and entire project turns flop.
Overall, Cooperative farming didnât grow beyond the government projects and the bogus cooperatives.
very nice
anyone wanting to share a cab from karol bagh to sarvodaya kanya vidyalaya, Yamuna vihar on 27th april 2014 for SSC re examination?
sir ,
can you please suggest how effectively to use PRS.ORG for polity preparations?
Sir, I am unable to find the next article of land reforms relating to forest rights act, etc..
sir
i am regular reader of your articles so i request you to please upload some articles on science and technology section along with environment and boidiversity as well.
Sir,
Is this the last article you have written in this series because i cannot find the forest rights act article that you have mentioned in the last line. Could you please provide with the url??
Thank you for all these wonderful notes.
Sir, the definition that you have given for cooperative farming is actually that of collective farming which was practiced in soviet union.
please confirm
pl.suggest efficient coop. training institutes in farming,dairy ,piggery & other co agri occupations
Yes