On India's Despairing Farms, a Plague of Suicide

By SOMINI SENGUPTA

Published: September 19, 2006



BHADUMARI, India - Here in the center of India, on a gray Wednesday 
morning, a cotton farmer swallowed a bottle of pesticide and fell 
dead at the threshold of his small mud house.

The farmer, Anil Kondba Shende, 31, left behind a wife and two small 
sons, debts that his family knew about only vaguely and a soggy, 
ruined 3.5-acre patch of cotton plants that had been his only source 
of income.

Whether it was debt, shame or some other privation that drove Mr. 
Shende to kill himself rests with him alone. But his death was by no 
means an isolated one, and in it lay an alarming reminder of the 
crisis facing the Indian farmer.

Across the country in desperate pockets like this one, 17,107 farmers 
committed suicide in 2003, the most recent year for which government 
figures are available. Anecdotal reports suggest that the high rates 
are continuing.

Though the crisis has been building for years, it presents an 
increasingly thorny political challenge for Prime Minister Manmohan 
Singh and his relations with the United States. High suicide rates 
and rural despair helped topple the previous government two years ago 
and put Mr. Singh in power.

Changes brought on by 15 years of economic reforms have opened Indian 
farmers to global competition and given them access to expensive and 
promising biotechnology, but not necessarily opened the way to higher 
prices, bank loans, irrigation or insurance against pests and rain.

Mr. Singh's government, which has otherwise emerged as a strong ally 
of America, has become one of the loudest critics in the developing 
world of Washington's $18 billion a year in subsidies to its own 
farmers, which have helped drive down the price of cotton for farmers 
like Mr. Shende.

At the same time, frustration is building in India with American 
multinational companies peddling costly, genetically modified seeds. 
They have made deep inroads in rural India - a vast and alluring 
market - bringing new opportunities but also new risks as Indian 
farmers pile up debt.

In this central Indian cotton-growing area, known as Vidarbha, the 
unofficial death toll from suicides, compiled by a local advocacy 
group and impossible to verify, was 767 in a 14-month period that 
ended in late August.

"The suicides are an extreme manifestation of some deep-seated 
problems which are now plaguing our agriculture," said M. S. 
Swaminathan, the geneticist who was the scientific leader of India's 
Green Revolution 40 years ago and is now chairman of the National 
Commission on Farmers. "They are climatic. They are economic. They 
are social."

India's economy may be soaring, but agriculture remains its Achilles' 
heel, the source of livelihood for hundreds of millions of people but 
a fraction of the nation's total economy and a symbol of its abiding 
difficulties.

In what some see as an ominous trend, food production, once India's 
great pride, has failed to keep pace with the nation's population 
growth in the last decade.

The cries of Indian farmers - or what Prime Minister Singh recently 
described as their "acute distress" - can hardly be neglected by the 
leaders of a country where two-thirds of people still live in the 
countryside.

Mr. Singh's government has responded to the current crisis by 
promptly expanding rural credit and promising investments in rural 
infrastructure. It has also offered several quick fixes, including a 
$156 million package to rescue "suicide prone" districts across the 
country and a promise to expand rural credit, waive interest on 
existing bank loans and curb usurious informal moneylenders.

But pressure is building to do more. Many, including Mr. Swaminathan, 
the agricultural scientist, would like to see the government restore 
subsidies to help farmers survive during crop failures or years of 
low world prices.

Subsidies, once a linchpin of Indian economic policy, have dried up 
for virtually everyone but the producers of staple food grains. 
Indian farmers now must compete or go under. To compete, many have 
turned to high-cost seeds, fertilizers and pesticides, which now line 
the shelves of even the tiniest village shops.

Monsanto, for instance, invented the genetically modified seeds that 
Mr. Shende planted, known as Bt cotton, which are resistant to 
bollworm infestation, the cotton farmer's prime enemy. It says the 
seeds can reduce the use of pesticides by 25 percent.

The company has more than doubled its sales of Bt cotton here in the 
last year, but the expansion has been contentious. This year, a legal 
challenge from the government of the state of Andhra Pradesh forced 
Monsanto to slash the royalty it collected from the sale of its 
patented seeds in India. The company has appealed to the Indian 
Supreme Court.

The modified seeds can cost nearly twice as much as ordinary ones, 
and they have nudged many farmers toward taking on ever larger loans, 
often from moneylenders charging exorbitant interest rates.

Virtually every cotton farmer in these parts, for instance, needs the 
assistance of someone like Chandrakant Agarwal, a veteran moneylender 
who charges 5 percent interest a month.

He collects his dues at harvest time, but exacts an extra premium, 
compelling farmers to sell their cotton to him at a price lower than 
it fetches on the market, pocketing the profit.

His collateral policy is nothing if not inventive. The borrower signs 
a blank official document that gives Mr. Agarwal the right to collect 
the farmer's property at any time.

Business has boomed with the arrival of high-cost seeds and 
pesticides. "Many moneylenders have made a whole lot of money," Mr. 
Agarwal said. "Farmers, many of them, are ruined."

Indeed, one or two crop failures, an unexpected health expense or the 
marriage of a daughter have become that much more perilous in a 
livelihood where the risks are already high.

A government survey released last year found that 40 percent of 
farmers said they would abandon agriculture if they could. The study 
also found that farming represented less than half the income of 
farmer households.

Barely 4 percent of all farmers insure their crops. Nearly 60 percent 
of Indian agriculture still depends entirely on the rains, as in Mr. 
Shende's case.

This year, waiting for a tardy monsoon, Mr. Shende sowed his fields 
three times with the genetically modified seeds made by Monsanto. Two 
batches of seed went to waste because the monsoon was late. When the 
rains finally arrived, they came down so hard that they flooded Mr. 
Shende's low-lying field and destroyed his third and final batch.

Mr. Shende shouldered at least four debts at the time of his death: 
one from a bank, two procured on his behalf by his sisters and one 
from a local moneylender. The night before his suicide, he borrowed 
one last time. From a fellow villager, he took the equivalent of $9, 
roughly the cost of a one-liter bottle of pesticide, which he used to 
take his life.

Those like him with small holdings are particularly vulnerable. A 
study by Srijit Mishra, a professor at the Mumbai-based Indira Gandhi 
Institute of Development Research, found that more than half of the 
suicides in this part of the country were among farmers with less 
than five acres of land.

But even those who are prosperous by local standards are not immune. 
Manoj Chandurkar, 36, has 72 acres of cotton with genetically 
modified seeds and sorghum in a neighboring village called Waifad. 
Every year is a gamble, he said.

Each time, he takes out a loan, then another and then prays that the 
bollworms will stay away and the rains will be good. On his shoulders 
today sit three loans, bringing his total debt to $10,000, a vast sum 
here.

The study by Mr. Mishra found that 86.5 percent of farmers who took 
their own lives were indebted - their average debt was about $835 - 
and 40 percent had suffered a crop failure.

The news of Mr. Shende's death brought his wife, Vandana, back home 
to Bhadumari. Relatives said she had gone to tend to her sick brother 
in a nearby village. By the time she arrived, her husband's body was 
covered by a thin checkered cloth.

A policeman had recorded the death - the eighth in six months for the officer.

Ms. Shende, squatting in the narrow village lane, shrouded her face 
in her cheap blue sari and wailed at the top of her lungs. "Your 
father is dead," she screamed at her small son, who stood before her, 
dazed.

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