Indian Agriculture
Indian Agriculture
Indian Agriculture
i) Subsistence farming:
The majority of farmers in India practice subsistence farming- farming
for their consumption. The entire production is largely consumed by
the farmers and their families and they do not have any surplus to
sell in the market.
Intensive
Primitive
v) Mixed Farming:
When both raising crops and rearing animals are carried on
simultaneously it is called mixed farming. Farmers engaged in mixed
farming have economical advantages as well.
Agriculture in India
The history of agriculture in India dates back to the neolothic. India ranks second
worldwide in farm outputs. As per 2018, agriculture employed more than 50% of the
Indian work force and contributed 17–18% to country's GDP. [1]
In 2016, agriculture and allied sectors like animal
husbandry, forestry and fisheries accounted for 17.5% of the GDP (gross domestic
product) with about 41.49% of the workforce in 2020. [2][3][4][5] India ranks first in the world
with highest net cropped area followed by US and China. [6] The economic contribution of
agriculture to India's GDP is steadily declining with the country's broad-based economic
growth. Still, agriculture is demographically the broadest economic sector and plays a
significant role in the overall socio-economic fabric of India.
The total agriculture commodities export was US$3.50 billion in March - June 2020. India
exported $38 billion worth of agricultural products in 2013, making it the seventh largest
agricultural exporter worldwide and the sixth largest net exporter. [7] Most of its agriculture
exports serve developing and least developed nations. [7] Indian agricultural/horticultural
and processed foods are exported to more than 120 countries, primarily to the
Japan, Southeast Asia, SAARC countries, the European Union and the United States.
Definition of farmer[edit]
The Indian government [10]
Indian farmers are people who grow crops. Various government estimates (Census,
Agricultural Census, National Sample Survey assessments, and Periodic Labour Force
Surveys) give a different number of farmers in the country ranging from 37 million to 118
million as per the different definitions.[11] Some definitions take in to account the number of
holdings as compared to the number of farmers.[11] Other definitions take into account
possession of land, while others try to delink land ownership from the definition of a
farmer.[12] Other terms also used include 'cultivator'.[12]
India's National Policy for Farmers 2007 defines farmer as:[13]
For the purpose of this Policy, the term “FARMER” will refer to a person actively engaged
in the economic and/or livelihood activity of growing crops and producing other primary
agricultural commodities and will include all agricultural operational holders, cultivators,
agricultural labourers, sharecroppers, tenants, poultry and livestock rearers, fishers,
beekeepers, gardeners, pastoralists, non-corporate planters and planting labourers, as
well as persons engaged in various farmingrelated occupations such as sericulture,
vermiculture, and agro-forestry. The term will also include tribal families / persons
engaged in shifting cultivation and in the collection, use and sale of timber and non-
timber forest produce.
History
Vedic literature provides some of the earliest written record of agriculture in
India. Rigveda hymns, for example, describes ploughing, fallowing, irrigation, fruit and
vegetable cultivation. Other historical evidence suggests rice and cotton were cultivated
in the Indus Valley, and ploughing patterns from the Bronze Age have been excavated
at Kalibangan in Rajasthan.[29] Bhumivargaha, an Indian Sanskrit text, suggested to be
2500 years old, classifies agricultural land into 12 categories: urvara (fertile), ushara
(barren), maru (desert), aprahata (fallow), shadvala (grassy), pankikala (muddy),
jalaprayah (watery), kachchaha (contiguous to water), sharkara (full of pebbles and
pieces of limestone), sharkaravati (sandy), nadimatruka (watered from a river), and
devamatruka (rainfed). Some archaeologists believe that rice was a domesticated crop
along the banks of the river Ganges in the sixth millennium BC.[30] So were species of
winter cereals (barley, oats, and wheat) and legumes (lentil and chickpea) grown in
northwest India before the sixth millennium BC.[citation needed] Other crops cultivated in India
3000 to 6000 years ago, include sesame, linseed, safflower, mustard, castor, mung
bean, black gram, horse gram, pigeon pea, field pea, grass pea (khesari), fenugreek,
cotton, jujube, grapes, dates, jack fruit, mango, mulberry, and black plum [citation needed]. Indians
might have domesticated buffalo (the river type) 5000 years ago. [31]
According to some scientists agriculture was widespread in the Indian peninsula, 10000–
3000 years ago, well beyond the fertile plains of the north. For example, one study
reports 12 sites in the southern Indian states of Tamil Nadu, Andhra Pradesh and
Karnataka providing clear evidence of agriculture of pulses Vigna
radiata and Macrotyloma uniflorum, millet-grasses (Brachiaria ramosa and Setaria
verticillata), wheats (Triticum dicoccum, Triticum durum/aestivum), barley (Hordeum
vulgare), hyacinth bean (Lablab purpureus), sorghum (Sorghum bicolor), pearl millet
(Pennisetum glaucum), finger millet (Eleusine
coracana), cotton (Gossypium sp.), linseed (Linum sp.), as well as gathered fruits
of Ziziphus and two Cucurbitaceae.[32][33]
Some claim Indian agriculture began by 9000 BC as a result of early cultivation of plants,
and domestication of crops.[34] Settled life soon followed with implements and techniques
being developed for agriculture. [35][36] Double monsoons led to two harvests being reaped
in one year.[37] Indian products soon reached trading networks and foreign crops were
introduced.[37][38] Plants and animals—considered esses "reeds that produce honey without
bees" being grown. These were locally called साखर, (Sākhara). On their return journey
soldiers carried the "honey bearing reeds," thus
spreading sugar and sugarcane agriculture.[39][40] People in India had invented, by about
500 BC, the process to produce sugar crystals. In the local language, these crystals were
called khanda (खण्ड), which is the source of the word candy.[41]
Before the 18th century, cultivation of sugarcane was largely confined to India. A few
merchants began to trade in sugar – a luxury and an expensive spice in Europe until the
18th century. Sugar became widely popular in 18th-century Europe, then graduated to
become a human necessity in the 19th century all over the world. Sugarcane plantations,
just like cotton farms, became a major driver of large and forced human migrations in the
19th century and early 20th century – of people from Africa and from India, both in
millions – influencing the ethnic mix, political conflicts and cultural evolution of Caribbean,
South American, Indian Ocean and Pacific Island nations. [42][43]
The history and past accomplishments of Indian agriculture thus influenced, in part,
colonialism, slavery and slavery-like indentured labour practices in the new
world, Caribbean wars and world history in 18th and 19th centuries
Horticulture[edit]
The total production and economic value of horticultural produce, such as fruits,
vegetables and nuts has doubled in India over the 10-year period from 2002 to 2012. In
2012, the production from horticulture exceeded grain output for the first time. The total
horticulture produce reached 277.4 million metric tonnes in 2013, making India the
second largest producer of horticultural products after China. [83] Of this, India in 2013
produced 81 million tonnes of fruits, 162 million tonnes of vegetables, 5.7 million tonnes
of spices, 17 million tonnes of nuts and plantation products (cashew, cacao, coconut,
etc.), 1 million tonnes of aromatic horticulture produce and 1.7 million tonnes of flowers
(7.6 billion cut flowers).[84][85]
Horticultural productivity in India, 2013
Average
Area under Average Area under
vegetable
fruits fruits yield vegetable
yield
Country[86] production (metric production
(metric
(million tonnes per (million
tonnes per
hectares)[86] hectare)[86] hectares)[86]
hectare)[86]
During the 2013 fiscal year, India exported horticulture products worth ₹14,365
crore (US$1.8 billion), nearly double the value of its 2010 exports. [83] Along with these
farm-level gains, the losses between farm and consumer increased and are estimated to
range between 51 and 82 million metric tonnes a year.
Main Objectives:
The following are some of the important objectives of
India’s agricultural policy:
(i) Raising the Productivity of Inputs:
One of the important objectives of India’s agricultural policy is
to improve the productivity of inputs so purchased viz., HYV
seeds, fertilizers, pesticides, irrigation projects etc.
Sustainability in Agriculture:
The new policy seeks to introduce economically viable,
technically sound, environmentally non-degrading and non-
hazardous and socially acceptable use of natural resources of
the country for promoting the concept of sustainable
agriculture.