"For example, a poor man has to survive somehow. He has no luxury of looking at better ways of living. But once we have crossed that basic poverty, then we have the luxury of planning. So, India is in that situation today. We have the luxury of planning," Dalwai said while delivering the Foundation Day lecture at the Indian Institute of Millets Research (IIMR), here yesterday.
The country is self-secure though there was drought for two successive years, he said.
"But now, time has come that particular green revolution technology...What has it done to our resources? So, is there not a need to shift from that particular technology to a new one, that policy to a new policy?" asked Dalwai.
"So, considering the tastes and preferences of the consumer, considering the environment in which a particular thing is grown, we need to design our policy such that we are able to give a stimulus to what should be grown better or in greater quantity," Dalwai said.
Quoting National Sample Survey Organisation figures, he said the net income of a farmer is Rs 6,426 per month and his monthly consumption is Rs 6,226, leaving him with only a surplus of Rs 200 per month.
There is a need to work on three variables --
improving farm productivity, decreasing cost of cultivation, and improving market efficiency -- to improve the state of agriculture, Dalwai said.
The Central government has increased MSP and gave a bonus to farmers in the last two years, he said.
Observing that pulses, millets and oilseeds are similar in nature, he said there is a need to bring them together.
He stressed that post-harvestment management is extremely important.
"So, production segment and post production segment are two basic pillars of this house called agriculture. We will have to bring greater focus on that. The government policy is precisely to focus on that now. Our committee is trying to that," he said.
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