
We constantly keep saying that we are a nation of farmers and that agriculture is our backbone. Why then are we not happy if in fact the relative price of rice is up as compared to steel or oil? Why are we banning the export of rice and flooding the country with duty-free food items to the detriment of our patriotic kisaans? Why are we not praising Bush instead of berating him?
The answer is simple — the welfare measures of our “socialistic” state have failed. While some farmers may benefit from high rice prices, all urban classes are hurt and our state is mortally scared of them just as Diocletian was! It must be pointed out that the Roman Empire and Victorian England were more advanced in dealing with issues of the welfare of the poor than we are. We spend tonnes of money, primarily for the benefit of contractors, bureaucrats and politicians — not for the benefit of the poor. For a country with the levels of privation that we have, we don’t even have public soup-kitchens or their equivalents through public-community-private partnership deals. All we have is monumental theft from the poorly executed PDS. And of course most of our agricultural welfare expenditure is marked not for the benefit of farmers or the poor, but the barons of the Fertiliser and Pesticide industries. We subsidise them and keep prices low resulting in overuse of these items which in turn causes untold ecological damage. The only intelligent programme in recent times was that launched by Jayalalithaa in Tamil Nadu where she encouraged temples and dargahs to provide free meals to the poor and encouraged well-to-do devotees to pay for them. She leveraged traditional beliefs and institutions in an imaginative way.
... contd.