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Agriculture and Manufacturing industry are drivers of growth for any economy.

India, which has


70% population living in rural areas with Agriculture as the main stay of employment, is setting
up goals to improve the condition of farmers by targeting to double the Agriculture income by
the year 2022 and make it a high growth, highly employable sector at par with manufacturing
industry and the service sector.

Number of steps are being taken up to achieve the goal. The Prime Minister of India, Shri
Narendra Modi has reiterated the government’s target that it wants to double farmers’ income by
2022 and said “With ‘Beej se Bazaar Tak’, we are bringing exceptional reforms in the agriculture
sector.”

Background

The transition of any nation from developing to developed nation is marked by a move from
traditional sector (agriculture) to modern sector (services and manufacturing)
Modernization was first initiated under the II Five Year Plan, famously known as the
Nehru-Mahalanobis plan which focused on pushing up the heavy and basic goods industry to
build local capacity and reduce reliance on foreign goods. This was thought to be a policy
impetus to absorb the surplus laborers in agriculture and counter disguised unemployment in
the sector.
Key Facts about the state of Indian Economy

In India, agriculture contributes around 15% to the GDP and absorbs a little more than 49% of
the labor force. The manufacturing sector contributes around 19% to the GDP and absorbs
around 27% of the labor force.
International comparisons with China, South Korea and Taiwan show the sluggish growth of
Indian manufacturing sector due to the rigid labor market
South East nations have grown and become the global manufacturing hubs despite being at
comparable GDP levels to India in 1970s and 1980s as they focused on building local
manufacturing units through both public and private investment.

Agriculture Backbone of Indian Economy and Manufacturing Industry

Generates Trade Surplus: India’s share in global agriculture produce is 7.68%. India has
maintained an overall trade surplus in agriculture since 2000s. The overall trade (exports+
imports) has also grown. India’s relative comparative advantage in agriculture is greater than
that in manufacturing and commercial activities.

Generates greater investible surplus & savings: The rise in agriculture output and income can
expand the market for manufacturing sector. The migration of surplus labor from agriculture to
manufacturing. This supports urbanization and industrialization as it did in England in 19th
century.

Provider of Raw Material: Agriculture provides raw materials and wage goods for manufacturing
industry like textile, Sugar, packaged food among others

Constraints in Agriculture Sector


The low contribution of agriculture to GDP despite 49% of the labor force in the sector shows
the inefficiencies in the sector as seen by:

Agriculture Bias: Farmers have not been able to fully exploit the comparative advantage in
agriculture exports due to overvalued exchange rate, tariffs and quota restrictions on trade of
agriculture products.

Decline in per capita availability: Despite an increase in yield, the per capita availability of
agriculture output has fallen due to excessive diversion of stock in silos and procurement and
release was ill timed. It has also put inflationary pressure during draughts.

How to Improve Agriculture Role:

Technological reforms to improve efficiency and to reduce dependence on monsoon as still


around 53% agricultural land is rain fed.
Rationalize food and fertilizer subsidies to circumvent inefficient resource allocation towards
certain crops like wheat and rice.
Role of Manufacturing Industry in India:

Manufacturing has the highest multiplier effect (backward linkage) on economic growth.
Provides modern inputs and implements for other sectors like fertilizers for agriculture.
Manufacturing has immense potential for job creation which can help in reducing poverty
The GVA by Automobile Industry is around 6% as of 2017. India is among the leading
automobile manufacturers and can emerge as global market leader in other segments.
Automobile sector’s employment multiplier value of five which is indicative of its large
employment generation capacity.
Constraints in Indian manufacturing sector:

Supply side bottlenecks like power supply and demand mismatch, infrastructural bottlenecks
leading to capacity underutilization;
Demand side constraints: India is a low income nation so large income inequalities skew the
demand of capital intensive goods
The growth of capital intensive industries due to more export demand has either taken down the
labor intensive firms or forced them to downsize to circumvent the stiff labor laws
How to improve Manufacturing Industry Role:

The rising inequalities and unemployment can be tackled by absorbing labor in manufacturing
sector especially in labor intensive sectors like textile. It can act as a driving force in India’s
growth trajectory through capital accumulation and better capacity utilization which currently is
at 70%.
Make in India needs both public and private investment to make India a manufacturing
powerhouse which will increase its export demand and GDP by creating new job opportunities.
The value added by MSMEs to manufacturing is more than 30%. They require more credit and
better ease of doing business to allow greater financial inclusion, encourage entrepreneurship
and gender equality.
Improving Agriculture Income: Steps Taken

Government has ensured in its notification that from Kharif 2018 onwards Minimum Support
Price (MSP) of the notified crops would be minimum of 150% of the cost of production; it ranges
from 150-200% for coarse cereals Minimum Support Price or MSP is an Agriculture product
price set by the Government of India to purchase directly from the farmer. This rate is to
safeguard the farmer to a minimum profit for the harvest, if the open market has lesser price
than the cost incurred.

Emphasis on agriculture as the prime industry of rural India urges doing everything possible to
make agriculture both a source of income and the pride of our nation.

The Prime Minister Modi’s Israel visit has placed a heavy stress on agricultural cooperation. It is
felt that Israeli agriculture and irrigation technologies can help deliver this goal.

Improving technology, increasing milk production, use of solar light, honey production.
Increase afforestation by planting more trees along the river banks to avoid soil erosion during
floods and to keep the rivers flowing eternally without getting them dry.

Government of Madhya Pradesh organized Narmada Yatra and has taken steps to prevent
Narmada River from going dry in next 100 years.
The Niti Aayog has prepared a ‘Three Year Action Agenda’ – a plan that covers a time period up
to the 2019. In its chapter on agriculture titled ‘Agriculture: Doubling Farmer’s Incomes’, the
economic think-tank has put forth a 4 point action plan to double the incomes of India’s farmers.
The 4 point action plan to improve Agriculture income includes 1) Remunerative prices for
farmers by reforming the existing marketing structure; 2) Raising productivity; 3) Reforming
agriculture land policy; and 4) Relief measures.
A subsidy would be provided on targeted produce in case the price falls below MSP-linked
threshold. It would spread price incentives to producers in all the regions and all the crops
considered important for providing price support.

The government and NABARD are pushing farmer-producer companies where a large group of
farmers pool their land together and work as a collective. Maharashtra has already asked the
Israeli Consulate in Mumbai to prepare a plan for establishing a farmer-producer collective in
Dehni village in Yavatmal district, which has one of the highest incidences of farmer suicides.
India has already adopted drip irrigation in some parts of Maharashtra, Gujarat and Haryana.
Israeli firm Netafim, the world’s largest micro-irrigation company, indigenized its Family Drip
System (FPS) for mainstream farming in India. Drip irrigation is now available for farms that are
as small as a quarter acre.

Agriculture and Manufacturing: Equally Important

Agriculture and Industry are complementary and not competitive in nature due to demand,
production and savings- investment linkages.
India needs to revamp its manufacturing sector and agriculture sector by using scientific
methods of production which are economically feasible and practical, environmentally
sustainable and globally competitive to exploit the gains from trade, increase output &s
employment and reduce inequalities.

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