Farmers caught by credit, but Nayakrishi is immune…


The Bangladesh Bank (B B) has recently expressed concern for defaulting agricultural loans (the Shokaler Khabar 12 March 2014). The B B has also instructed the concerned scheduled banks to take effective step for reducing the defaulters in agricultural loans. The defaulted farm loan in the banking sector had increased by 44 percent as of January 31, 2014 from the same date a year ago.

The situation of much acknowledged microcredit is not so different from agricultural loan. A BBC report said, in Bangladesh poor people are selling organs as a last resort to repay their microcredit debts. The report said:”Kalai, like many other villages, several villagers have resorted to selling organs to pay back microcredit loans that were meant to lift them out of poverty”(October28,2013,the Bangladesh poor selling organs to pay debts, http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-asia-24128096).

High yielding varieties (HYV) of rice from the International Rice Research Institute (IRRI) were introduced in Bangladesh in mid sixties of twentieth century. Hybrid rice was introduced in late nineties. Other major crops also followed the same trend of modernization. Rapid loss of local varieties and indigenous knowledge of the farmers as well as the erosion of the ecosystem that maintains them, both are the costs paid for such violent intervention. The corporate seeds were accompanied by power tiller, tractor,irrigation from extraction of ground water, chemical fertilizer, pesticides and herbicides. In order to acquiring all these costly inputs the farmers are compelled to borrow credits from banks, microcredit based NGOs, money lenders and other sources. The hazards and ill effects of green revolution are more or less acknowledged in the mainstream although any meaningful and effective policy to correct the trend has hardly been undertaken. Instead, we are facing so called ‘second green revolution’ in the form of genetic manipulation of biological basis of life.

In the market based economy the small and marginal farmers are exploited by the middlemen, brokers, hoarders, wholesalers and the syndicates. Sometimes the market is inundated with imported items. Scarcity for availability of laborer is increasing day by day especially at the time of harvest of crops. Sometimes potato, tomato, onion, garlic, jute, etc are left un-harvested in the field. This is because the market price of the produce is less than that of the labor cost of harvest. The cost of production is higher than that of the market price of the produce. Thus, the farmer in most cases run at a loss and become indebted.

Some seed companies supply vulnerable varieties of seeds and the farmers suffer from loss of crop. In recent years the farmers at Godagari, Rajshahi suffered loss of hybrid tomato crop due to disease on seed supplied by Syngenta in 2011. In 2012, there was loss of crop in hybrid rice, Jhalak in different districts from seed supplied by Energy Pack. Farmers at Agoiljhara, Barisal district faced with loss of hybrid rice, Jamaibabu-12, due to neck blast disease (Jugantor,19 April 2012).

Bio-geographical and the ecological character of Bangladesh by nature is potential for agriculture and agro-ecology is the basic foundation of the economy. Nevertheless, at the same time the country is prone to natural calamities like flood, cyclone, drought, fog, etc. The indigenous varieties of crops and other life forms are adapted to the dynamic agro-ecological conditions. Against the backdrop of the so called Green Revolution fall out, the Nayakrishi farmers have been striving for practicing ecological agriculture and maintaining biological diversity, environment, soil and other resources, keeping away from the nexus of credit dilemma . More than three hundred thousand farm house hold in nineteen districts of Bangladesh are now practicing Nayakrishi.

The performance of Nayakrishi(ecological agriculture) has been evaluated by independent researchers and commented for its sustainability. Some of those links are given as follows:

1.Golam Rasul,Gopal B Thapa.2004.Sustainability of ecological and conventional agricultural system in Bangladesh: an assessment based on environment, economic and social perspectives, Agricultural Systems 79(2004):327-351,www.sciencedirect.com

2.Keiko Yoshino.2010. Historical development, present situation and prospects of organic farming :Examples from Japan and Bangladesh, 4th Asian Rural Sociology Association(ARSA),International Conference,263-276(arsa1996.org/ARSA-4-PRCDGS-2/ALTERNATIVE LAND USE MANAGEMENT AND FARMING)

3.Sarker,M.A. and Yoshito Itohara.2008.Organic Farming and poverty elimination: A suggested model for Bangladesh, Journal of Organic Systems 3(1): 68-79).

 

 

 

 

 


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