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Where India has come from to become a major food exporter: Lessons for East Africa

Where India has come from to become a major food exporter: Lessons for East Africa. Ram C. Chaudhary Chairman, Participatory Rural Development Foundation, India Ram.Chaudhary@gmail.com. India after Independence in 1947 - 1965. 1943 Bengal Famine: 3 million died of starvation

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Where India has come from to become a major food exporter: Lessons for East Africa

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  1. Where India has come from to become a major food exporter: Lessons for East Africa Ram C. Chaudhary Chairman, Participatory Rural Development Foundation, India Ram.Chaudhary@gmail.com

  2. India after Independence in 1947 - 1965 • 1943 Bengal Famine: 3 million died of starvation • Basket case country of hungry and food importers: western press. • Dependent on PL480 & Food Imports. • Still food crisis continued. • Hunger death & mal-nourishment rampant

  3. Food (000 tons) Import and Export (FAO 1999)

  4. 15 years later (late1970s) • Drought of 1965-66 forced India to change its agricultural policy. • Food self-sufficiency targeted. • Wheat yield increased from 0.8 tons / ha of 1960s to 4.7 tons /ha in 1970. • Era of Green Revolution; food production soared.

  5. Now India world’s largest producerSource: FAOSTAT 2012

  6. India 2nd largest producer of:

  7. International Grains Council • In 2012 India largest rice exporter (8.7 m tons). • Still warehouses are over-flowing and storage problem with new crop harvested. • While still selling 25 kg rice /month for 1 US$ to 10 million BPL (Below Poverty Line) families. • With 4.2% water and 2.4% land it feeds 17% of world population !!!

  8. Current superlatives for India • Largest democracy with 1.21 billion people • 4th largest economy of the world. • Largest area under wheat, rice, cotton, pulses (beans) and spices. • Largest producer of fruits, milk, pulses (beans) and spices. • Second largest producer of wheat, rice and a number of other foods

  9. Current superlatives continued… • Improved road, power, technology and reforms yield up by 500% over 40 years. • Agriculture did not develop in Isolation ! • Between 4 richest billionaire of the world and 300 m poors, 900 m vibrant middle class as stabilizer & power-house of India.

  10. Trends in Food grains production: 1973 - 2011

  11. Productivity (kg/ha) growth in India over last 40 years (1970 to 2010)

  12. 12 Five Year Plan of India: 2012- 2016

  13. Major thrusts of 12th Plan in Agriculture • New technologies: Demand-driven & innovation-led R & D funded by 1% increased to 2% of GDP. 2. Technology dissemination: ATMA at district level, and now RKVY for convergence. 3. Rainfed agriculture: RFD Authority to coordinate. 4. Seed System: National Mission on Seed to coordinate public and private sectors; assure policy intervention. 5. IPM / NPM / Organic Agriculture: Promotion as environment friendly, safe to health and sustainable. 6. Land & tenancy reforms: In most states farmers owned and heritable, in remaining one under process.

  14. Major thrusts of 12th Plan….. 7. Livestock & Fishery promotion:- Already has White Revolution in milk yet striving for major increases. Poultry and Fishery sectors will receive technological innovations. 8. Market linkage:- For small and medium farmers reforms put in place to reduce farm and market-gate prices. 9. Crop Insurance:- Agriculture is risky and to avoid farmers losses due to crop failure, crop insurance introduced. 10. These steps will pave for 2nd Green Revolution.

  15. Reduced share and increased growth in Agriculture (%)

  16. What made Indian Agriculture CLICK ?(in Billion US$)

  17. Major policy incentives by Govt. • Minimum Support Price (MSP):- MSP is announced well ahead of planting season. Govt. obliged to buy the produce if prices fall below MSP. • Subsidy on Inputs:- N, P & K fertilizers heavily subsidized. Seed is VAT free sold subsidised. • Private Sector incentive: Zero VAT attracts investment in Seed Sector. Farmers get cheaper seed .

  18. Policy incentive contd. • Reduced Dependence on Agriculture:- Share of agriculture in GDP reduced from 51 % in 1951 to 14.2 % in year 2011. • Convergence:-Many agencies & schemes. Non coordination and duplication. Converged under RKVY. • Inclusiveness:-Small, medium, large farmers cared in the policies. All benefit to the same tune.

  19. Policy support to farm sector • MNREGA to guarantee 100-day jobs for unemployed agricultural labourers • Warehouse Receipt system since 2006. • Repeal Cess Act in 2006 to remove 0.6% tax on agricultural produce in marketing • Kisan Credit Card:- for farmers to access credit.

  20. Human Resource Develeopment • 53 State Agricultural Universities ( with 2,000 or more students / univeristy) • 5 Central / Deemed Agricultural Universities • 4 Universities with Agriculture Faculty • 700 Regular agricultural scientists • 1,100 Extension workers

  21. R & D institutions in agriculture • 97 Crop or discipline oriented Central • Research Institutes of ICAR. • 61 agricultural research institutions. • 61 All India Coordinated Research Projects with 50 – 250 testing centres. • 591 KVK (Agri Science Centres) for Demo. • 100s of R & D centres of private sector & 225 larger NGOs

  22. Outputs do follow plans • Annual pass-outs of students: - Ph D: 2,000 - M. Sc: 8,000 - UG : 25,000 Crop varieties released over last 40 years: - Rice: 271 - Wheat: 130 - Maize: 80

  23. ICAR tracks food demand (m tons) to prepare research strategy and growth (%) required

  24. Largest farm produce by value in India: Target 2030

  25. Brief Profile of 4 East African countries(FAOSTAT 2012)

  26. Cereal yield (t/ha) in Asia &Sub-Saharan Africa (1961 – 2001)

  27. Cereal production kg/person Asia &Sub-Saharan Africa 1961-2001

  28. State of World under-nourished(Hunger Task Force of IFAD)

  29. Food Insecurity in the World 2012 (FAO report 2012

  30. Who the hungry are? (Source: Hunger Task Force)

  31. Duration of longest crises in African Countries 1986 - 2004

  32. Kenya: Brief Country Profile, 2012

  33. Rwanda: Brief Country Profile, 2012

  34. Tanzania: Brief profile, 2012

  35. Uganda: Brief profile, 2012

  36. CAN AFRICA BE THE FUTURE RICE BOWL FOR ASIA ?Ram C. Chaudhary and Dat Van Tran, 2000International Rice Development Conference, Philippines • In major Asian countries rice area hit ceiling, now declining. • Chinese, Indians, Bangladeshi, Viets, Middle Eastern, Europeans make a “Rice-Rush” in Africa. Use them and not abuse them as “land-grabbers”. • Get a firm National Plan for Rice Production in place and invite donors and investors alike. • Show your strong political will, supportive advocacy and consistency in policy.

  37. Current & Potential area for rice in E. African countries (FAOSTAT 2012; That, 1982*

  38. Area, Production and Import of Rice in East Africa(FAOSTAT 2012, Unbroken rice data of 2010, import 2009)

  39. Rice (total) Import in East Africa (FAOSTAT 2012)

  40. Rice in Uganda • Rice introduced in 1904 by Indian traders. Cultivated in Upland and swamp in 140,000 ha and produce 218,111 tons. • Consumption 250,000 tons annually but growing @10%. • Favourable rain (1250 – 1370 mm) and temperature (15 – 30C) round the year make continuous rice cultivation possible. • Import 79,964 tons for US$33.2 million. Population 31.8 million growing @ 3.5%. • Under NRDS plan to produce 465,000 tons by 2018. • Potential to become “Seed Basket of East Africa”

  41. Shaping the future in East African Agriculture • Analyze the ground realities. • Count on your strength(resources, UN and CGIAR institutions, COMESA, ACTESA, others ) • Plan & Policy (well defined, inter-regional trade) • Implement with transparent honesty • Provide LEADERSHIP

  42. Leadership: Dr Abdul Kalam, ex President India,July 2012 • Leader must have a vision. • Leader must have passion to realize the vision. • Leader must be able to travel into an unexplored path. • Leader must know to manage success & failure. • Leader must have courage to take decisions. • Leader should be transparent in every action. • Leader must work with & succeed with integrity.

  43. See you !!! Thanks

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