




Three points emerge from this. First, this is an undoubtedly ambitious target, but it is achievable. There is much that needs to be done in a sector where productivity levels are extremely low, and small improvements can lead to great outcomes. In a joint work this writer did with Bibek Debroy for the FAO, a range of crops were identified, where Indian yields are far, far below those of China — a country with lesser-irrigated and poorer-quality arable land. The difference is that of practices and technology use. Therefore improvements are not just necessary, they are possible.
Third, it is well known now that sustained agri growth will come about not through a few improvements but a whole package: credit availability, technology improvements, changes in practices, marketing improvements, changes in the various laws limiting trade and greater rural infrastructure investment. Most important, there is little argument on this; and politicians across the spectrum acknowledge the importance of ensuring greater farmer access to credit, inputs, technology and markets. In other words, the country is finally ready for a second green revolution.
... contd.


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