A village shopkeeper in Himachal Pradesh. (Photo by Michael Foley)
The active promotion of enterprises in rural India is a possible way to further growth in the countryside and there's need to examine their possibilities and limitations in order to tackle the problem of burgeoning unemployment
By Sanjiv Phansalkar*
Arable land in India is limited and further expansion of the area under cultivation has virtually stopped. Mechanisation is happening in agriculture in virtually every possible activity—from ploughing to harvesting. Finally, the growth in irrigation is tardy and mired in a wide range of seemingly complex problems. Hence, further growth in net sown area is unlikely to be significant.
As a combined result of all this, further absorption of labour in agriculture is very unlikely. This goes in tandem with the fact that virtually every able-bodied man seeks to and often does migrate for work outside, often in urban centres. This creates the problem of unwieldy if not chaotic urbanisation on one hand and a complex problem of managing a very large but footloose workforce comprising seasonal migrants.
Promoting enterprise
In such a scenario, promotion of enterprises and self-employment for rural people is seen as a possible way to further growth in rural India. The possibilities and limits of enterprises as a solution to the burgeoning problem of rural unemployment need to be examined in this light.
[A]n entrepreneur aims to grow his enterprise but rural individuals essentially stay satisfied just meeting their livelihood needs.
Humility demands that we start by accepting that preaching about entrepreneurship to rural people is like carrying coal to Newcastle. The rural individuals do identify an opportunity for earning incomes and they do manage and manoeuvre resources around them to cater to that opportunity. They actually cater to it and derive their livelihoods. They carry huge risks in the entire process — the risk of obtaining raw materials in time, the risk of ensuring they stay good, the risk of locating and engaging with a buyer for their produce, and certainly the price and payment realisation risks. Thus in almost all respects, what they do matches the copybook definition of what an entrepreneur does.
The only difference is that an entrepreneur aims to grow his enterprise but rural individuals essentially stay satisfied just meeting their livelihood needs. In all other respects, most of the activities which rural people carry out, including farming, have entrepreneurial content.
Livelihood enterprises
It may be instructive to see what exists on the ground. Enterprises were classified based on size or equivalent parameters (employment, capital invested, etc.) earlier in order to fit them to the agenda of the specific regulatory and promotional agencies. For the moment, we deviate from such categorisation of enterprises. It is perhaps more functional and relevant to categorise enterprises on the basis of their relation to rural livelihoods.
A livelihood enterprise is the simplest form of an enterprise. Here the entrepreneur is a solo operator managing all functions of her enterprise and her main goal is earning sufficient money to make her ends meet. She has no employees. She perhaps cannot distinguish between her work and her life because the two are inexorably intertwined.
Such enterprises are often based on collection of naturally occurring items (wood lopping, roots, fruit, other material), rudimentary processing in the sense of sorting, grading etc., and selling it in proximate markets.
The other form of enterprise in this class is connected with commonplace items of consumption such as snack foods or flower garlands. A somewhat advanced form of this type is seen when she makes articles of artistic appeal such as handlooms or handicraft items, which may have functional utility and artistic value. The chief characteristics of this type of an enterprise is that it is oriented towards meeting current needs and not towards capital accumulation and that it involves no one other than the person (the entrepreneur) herself.
Institutionalised enterprises
A more institutionalised form of enterprise, also commonly seen across villages in the country, is the family enterprise. In this, while a certain degree of employment of persons other than the entrepreneur is observed, the employment is generally of members of the same family.
Some degree of division of labour is also observed. One person goes for collection of materials from the neighbourhood, a second person may specialise in processing it while a third could deliver it to customers and collect money. Most allied activities such as dairying or small-scale horticulture fall in this category. The younger people go collect grass for the dairy animal, the housewife tends to the animals and milks them and the husband or the son goes to deliver in the market and collects money. But the enterprise has the same basic character as the livelihood enterprise — it is oriented towards meeting consumption needs and there is hardly any formal separation between work and life.
Aggregators
As one proceeds further up the ladder, we come to the third category of relevance, namely that of the aggregator. The aggregator collects the produce from several livelihood or family enterprises and focuses on marketing the produce so pooled. This enterprise necessarily has a division of labour in it. Someone focuses on engaging with managing the transactions of vendors. Depending upon the total quantity thus pooled, the enterprise may need a range of operations for marketing — from engaging a few persons to deliver to multiple customers to maintaining a full-fledged establishment in the nearby market town.
The aggregator collects the produce from several livelihood or family enterprises and focuses on marketing the produce so pooled.
The aggregator could be someone who simply pools the produce and sends it further up, or she could have a processing wing to her operations. The latter then becomes even more complex since processing would follow its own technology and hence technical logic, involve staff specialising in specific operations in the processing part and perhaps different staff catering to distribution needs of different type of produce or by-product.
The size, the commodity and the location of this enterprise tend to influence the extent to which it shows the characteristic attributes of livelihood enterprise in terms of ability to meet consumption needs being the primary goal and little separation between work and life.
Growth-oriented enterprises
Beyond this stage, even rural or rural based enterprises start acquiring the nature of growth-oriented capitalist enterprises. Their physical location tends to shift to market towns, there's a clear separation between owners, managers and supervisory staff and workmen start appearing and the distance rises between the enterprise and the locale of primary production and collection.
The question is whether one aims for greater labour absorption in these enterprises or to build on this entrepreneurial base, or for the sake of expanding employment in rural areas one strikes out a new line of enterprises which do not depend on existing materials, skills or orientation of the people. That in turn would have serious and practical implications for the task of enterprise promotion and livelihood creation.
**
Sanjiv Phansalkar is associated closely with Transform Rural India Foundation. He was earlier a faculty member at the Institute of Rural Management Anand (IRMA). Phansalkar is a fellow of the Indian Institute of Management (IIM) Ahmedabad.
Views are personal.
This article was first published on VillageSquare.in, a public-interest communications platform focused on rural India.