“Land reforms in India got rid of zamindari and put land in the hands of the tiller. Land ceiling was introduced to ensure there would be no concentration of ownership over land. What the government is calling “reforms” are, in effect, anti-reform reforms, aimed at undoing every policy and law that we have put in place in independent and democratic India to ensure the rozi-roti of the last person. Walmart will harm and wipe out small farmers and businesses in India the way it has harmed farmers and retailers in the US. And because the density of small farmers and small retailers is higher in India than anywhere else in the world, the destructive impact will be magnified manifold.” — Vandana Shiva
India is a land of small farmers. According to the United Nations, the smaller the farm, the higher the productivity.
Small farms grow biodiversity. They are falsely described as unproductive because productivity in agriculture has been manipulated to exclude diversity and exclude costs of high chemical and capital inputs in chemical industrial agriculture. When biodiversity is taken into account, small farms produce more food and higher incomes.
In the heated debate on FDI in retail, those promoting it repeatedly claim that the entry of corporations like Walmart will benefit the Indian farmer. Reference is made to getting rid of the middleman.
Any trader who mediates in the distribution of goods between producers and consumers is a middleman. Walmart is neither a producer nor a consumer. Therefore, it is also a middleman; it is a giant middleman with global muscle. That is how it has become the world’s biggest retailer, carrying out business of nearly $480 billion. So the issue is not getting rid of the middleman but replacing the small arthi with a giant one. The Walton Family is the global arthi located in the US, not in the local community. And this new kind of arthi combines the functions of all small traders everywhere from wholesale to retail. Instead of millions of small traders taking a two per cent commission at different levels, Walmart gets all profits. If three small traders mediate at two per cent between the producer and consumer, the difference between the farm price and consumer price is just six per cent. When Walmart enters the picture, the difference jumps with the farmer getting only two per cent of the consumer price and Walmart and its supply chain harvesting the 98 per cent. So the issue is not the number of middlemen but their size and their share of profits. It was to avoid this concentration of power over the agricultural produce market that India created the Agricultural Produce Marketing Committee (APMC) Act. Our mandis are governed by cooperatives, which include farmers. No trader can buy more than a certain amount. This prevents monopolies. It creates a decentralised, democratic distribution system from wholesale to retail.
The government, especially the Planning Commission, has been trying very hard to dismantle the APMCs and mandis to facilitate the entry of big business in agriculture. The announcement of FDI in retail will radically change Indian agriculture. It threatens the survival of the small Indian farmer and the diversity of our farming systems.
Given the size of Walmart, it creates a monopsony through its buying power. It does not go to each small farmer and buys the five sacks of extra produce. It works through giant supply chains and giant suppliers which have no place for the small. Walmart and the small, independent farmer cannot coexist. When Walmart dominates, agribusiness dominates. Industry and corporations start to control agriculture.
We can already see early attempts at the industry takeover of agriculture to match centralised and giant production systems with centralised and giant retail. On March 5 this year, the government announced a new policy for the corporate control of agriculture called Public-Private Partnership for Integrated Agricultural Development (PPP-IAD) — a scheme for facilitating large-scale integrated projects, led by private-sector players in the agriculture and allied sectors, with a view to aggregating farmers, creating critical rural infrastructure, introducing new technologies, adding value and integrating the agricultural supply chain.
The department of agriculture and cooperation has launched the PPP-IAD, which is proposed to cover 10 lakh farmers across India during the period 2012-17. Each of the integrated agricultural projects would involve engaging a minimum of 10,000 farmers. The scheme would accept proposals from private corporate entities on integrated agricultural development projects with the proviso that intervention must cover all aspects from production to marketing.
Subsidies will now go to corporations, not the farmers. In effect, 10,000 farmers will no longer be independent producers, but bonded to the corporation. These corporations will be Walmart’s partners, not the small farmer.
This scheme, and the policy framework of which it is a part, is in effect a subversion of both land reforms and our food security. Land reforms in India got rid of zamindari and put land in the hands of the tiller. Land ceiling was introduced to ensure there would be no concentration of ownership over land. What the government is calling “reforms” are, in effect, anti-reform reforms, aimed at undoing every policy and law that we have put in place in independent and democratic India to ensure the rozi roti of the last person. Walmart will harm and wipe out small farmers and businesses in India the way it has harmed farmers and retailers in the US. And because the density of small farmers and small retailers is higher in India than anywhere else in the world, the destructive impact will be magnified manifold.
The argument that we need FDI in retail was made when the government allowed Walmart to enter wholesale business in 2007. No infrastructure has been built, even though five years have passed. In any case, the government has given away crores in subsidies for warehouses and cold storages since it introduced “reforms”. We need a black paper to assess all the public money that has already been spent on what the government says only Walmart can do.
And the more the government pushes policies towards monopolies and monocultures, the more committed I become to defend our economic democracy and diversity as a saner, more sustainable, more just alternative to the disease of giganticism. – The Asian Age, 10 Oct. 2012
» Vandana Shiva is the executive director of the Navdanya Trust
Filed under: india | Tagged: agribusiness, agriculture, bharti-walmart, biodiversity, capitalism, ecology, economics, economy, farmers, FDI, FDI in retail, geopolitics, globalisation, imperialism, india, indian economy, indian politics, industrial agriculture, industry, land reforms in india, middleman, monopoly, politics, science, small farmers, small traders, trade, US politics, walmart |























Any connection between Sonia’s visit to America for unclosed illness and Walmart coming to India (FDI deal)
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Yes, Vijayaji, it is very much possible. Provided that every household has to tend desi cows as was the case in earlier days. Without cow self-sufficiency is just impossible. I can understand, for city dwellers it is difficult at the moment to rear cows but people living in rural India can do that with little effort. Besides, city dwellers have to find out ways to start rearing cows. After all it is a question of their survival. Whether we like it or not we have to give up the present form of industrialization fashioned after western model of development at one point of time or other or else we are heading for disaster for sure.
I hail from a place which is industrially the most developed district in Orissa. I must say that the thirty years of aggressive industrialization has turned my heaven like village to a virtual hell making it the most uninhabitable place in the state. It is now India’s one of the most polluted areas. Before the inception of industrialization, the district was the leading producer of all kinds of desi vegetables, pulses, sugar cane, oil seeds and other agricultural products in Orissa. The uniqueness of the agricultural products of my district is that they are matchless in quality and taste and they bear rich medicinal values. This apart, my district was famous for her forest produce as a large part of the district was under the cover of thick deciduous forest including a good number of sandal trees. Now, vegetables (mostly hybrid kinds), prices of which are unbelievably high, are being imported to this district from other parts of the state even outside the state. Agricultural activities are no more to be seen. Large chunks of agricultural lands have been acquired by various by different companies for setting up industries. People have become more or less indentured labourers and have been working with those companies which have grabbed their hearths and home for the establishment of plants. Now the irony is that these companies are making huge profits all at cost the people of the district. Various diseases resulting from severe environmental pollution is on the increase in the district. This apart, the crime rate has gone up in this area which was once a fairly peaceful place.
So desi cow is the key. It can solve our energy problem in the most sustainable way. Please read this article http://articles.timesofindia.indiatimes.com/2004-12-08/edit-page/27160438_1_methane-gas-gobar-gas-lpg-and-kerosene. Similarly, our farmer-brothers do not need to depend on the poisonous chemical fertilizers and pesticides. For, cow dung is the best manure to be used in agricultural field. Again, cow urine can be used to prepare the best kind of pesticides. I have successfully prepared them and distributed them among farmers. They really work wonders. Besides, there is no need to use the fuel consuming tractors and power tillers as bullocks will come handy in ploughing fields. Once the usefulness of cow is restored people will start rearing cow sagain and stop selling them to butchers.
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@cnn: is it possible to start self sufficient subsistence style farming as small enterprises? Then, the price of fertilisers etc. will not be as great a problem. And the availability of labour can be countered by family members chipping in.
A couple of years ago there was a report about a village which decided that it did not want Monsanto, because they saw the ill effects in neighbouring villages. So, a woman learned to ride a bycycle and rode all day around the village to drive off any agents from Monsanto.
She was called The General.
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Yes, visitors should click the link above and read the article. They will learn first hand how Walmart treats its employees and makes money!
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There is a great deal of migration of youth belonging invariably to farmers’ families is taking place from rural India to cities or industrially developed locations. Such devastating is this immigration that if this trend continues all agricultural activities will come to a naught in next one decade or so. The reason for this migration is that agriculture is a thankless job in India. The anglicized, secular, anti-national elite class that has been ruling the country ever since the departure of the British never fails to look down upon the farmers as illiterate, uncouth, superstitious and what not. Besides, agriculture is no more a profitable profession in India. Expensive fertilizers, pesticides, non availability of cheap labour and the introduction of tractors and power tillers have rendered it unprofitable. So when industrialization has opened up opportunity for them to abandon agriculture they have done that even if they have to work as hapless labourers in industries in rather hostile conditions. I have no doubt that the MNCs (which include Indian Corporations also) engaged in farming are always in the look out of such opportunities to grab the uncultivated land of the poor Indian farmers who have to abandon farming for the above reasons. Sooner or later total agricultural sector will be in the hands of the MNCs. Now any body can guess what will happen to the Indians
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http://www.theglobalist.com/storyid.aspx?storyid=9769
Why It’s Impossible To Unionize Walmart
By Timothy Noah | Friday, October 05, 2012
Within the private sector of the U.S. economy, writes Timothy Noah in his book “The Great Divergence,” labor unions are in disarray. Nowhere is this clearer than in the case of Walmart, the largest private employer in the United States. Walmart takes pride in “rolling back” prices — but it is also very good at rolling back wages by thwarting employees’ attempts at joining unions.
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Excellent article !
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