Snapshots | Part 3

Snapshots | Part 3

Everything you need to know about Bharat. The key facts and figures.

(Photo: Bandeep Singh)

PROBLEM OF PLENTY

Green turns mean

According to a joint estimate drawn up by the Indian Council of Agricultural Research and the International Food Policy Research Institute in 2016, India would need 111.8 million tonnes of rice and 98.3 million tonnes of wheat by 2020. We surpassed this last year. Now, the real challenge for the government is to manage the surplus. A lot will depend on the implementation of the Agriculture Export Policy, 2018, which aims at doubling farmers' incomes

LAND LOCKED

(Photo: Pankaj Tiwari)

Small isn't beautiful

The government has admitted that small farmers, who own less than 4 hectares of farm land, may not be able to support their families with income from agriculture alone. As per OECD data, 85 per cent of operational landholdings are of less than 2 hectares and account for 45 per cent of the total cropped area. Only 5 per cent of farmers work on landholdings larger than 4 hectares, according to the Agricultural Census, 2016

THE BIG PICTURE

(Photo: Shekhar Kumar Ghosh)

...And the commitment to 'Bharat'

In the run-up to the general elections in 2019, and given the all-pervasive narrative of rural distress, it was expected the Modi government's last full Budget would demonstrate a more credible commitment to Bharat. Instead, we have seen governments seek recourse to band-aid solutions like loan waivers.

WHITE OUT

(Photo: Rachit Goswami)

Say cheese

The past 15 years have seen India emerge as the largest producer of milk in the world. The country is expected to produce 254.5 million tonnes of milk by 2021-22. In fact, India, at nearly 6 per cent average annual growth in the past three years, has outpaced the global milk production growth rate, which is just 2.09 per cent.

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Posted bySnigdha Choudhury