[“At best, the data is an informed guess by the officials. The guess
could very well be misinformed, too. At worst, they could be cooking
up the data.”]

http://scroll.in/article/824778/the-government-releases-rosy-data-on-wheat-sowing-but-no-one-knows-who-is-collecting-it

NOTE DEMONETISATION

The government releases rosy data on wheat sowing – but no one knows
who has collected it

The Agriculture Ministry claims wheat sowing is normal this year,
despite demonetisation. But in Uttar Pradesh, officials say surveys
have not yet begun.

3 hours ago
Updated 17 minutes ago

Manas Roshan

In the beginning of November, Dheerpal Yadav had finished the harvest
of his paddy crop and was preparing to sell at the mandi in town.
Thanks to timely monsoon rains this year, his 10 bighas of land in
Sainjhani village in Uttar Pradesh’s Budaun district had yielded a
bumper crop.

Then the rug was pulled from under his feet.

On the evening of November 8, Prime Minister Narendra Modi announced
the demonetisation of large currency notes. Over the next few days,
there was chaos in the mandis, where all transactions between farmers
and traders take place in cash.

“If we took the old notes, they [traders] would give us Rs 1,200 for a
quintal. If it is the new notes you want, then just Rs 1,000,” said
Yadav, standing in his fields outside the village. “Why would I take
the old ones? I took the new notes. I wasn’t getting any from the
banks.” Sainjhani has one bank branch, which also services residents
from six surrounding villages.

Dheerpal’s larger problem was the sowing season for wheat that loomed
ahead. He needed Rs 5,000-6,000 to buy seeds, fertilisers and hire a
tractor to plough his little plot. The money he had earned from
selling paddy was running out after he paid for the expenses of his
household of six and settled his debts. Dheerpal borrowed about Rs
3,000 from a moneylender – at 5% monthly interest – but it was not
enough to hire labour. In December, by the time he planted his crop
with the help of his old tai and tau (aunt and uncle), he had lost two
weeks.

Dheerpal Yadav (centre) with his family in Sainjhani village in
Budaun, Uttar Pradesh.
Dheerpal Yadav (centre) with his family in Sainjhani village in
Budaun, Uttar Pradesh.

Across villages in Budaun and Bareilly – two districts in Western
Uttar Pradesh that Scroll.in visited – farmers said only about 70% of
sowing was complete. Not only was sowing delayed, many farmers had not
been able to purchase new seeds and had fallen back on the grain they
had saved for the household. Many chose to forgo the use of
fertiliser.

But officials in the agricultural department denied demonetisation had
dampened rabi sowing. “Sowing has been completed on 2.2 lakh hectares
of the 2.57 lakh hectares target we had set. That is about 85%,” said
Vinod Kumar, the district agricultural officer of Budaun. “The rest
should be done by the end of December.”

The Union Ministry of Agriculture’s weekly crop statistics since
November have consistently painted a similar picture of normalcy for
the country: steadily rising estimates of the sown area of wheat, with
the difference between this year’s acreage and the five-year average
narrowing down to just one percentage point.


But the ministry’s releases contain a rider: these are “eye estimates”.

How reliable is the data, then?

‘Haven’t started survey, how can I give data?’
In Uttar Pradesh, which contributes a quarter of India’s wheat
production, the largest share among all states, officials admitted
that crop surveys begin only at the end of the sowing period in
January. In the interim, the state agriculture department relies on
“eye estimates” gathered through “general observation” by its field
staff.

Dr Vinod Singh, a director at the state agricultural department, said
it has at least three sources for the information. “Our krishi
sahayaks on the ground in each block gather data,” he said.

Scroll spoke to one such sahayak or technical assistant in Budaun,
Govind Sharma, based in Bisauli town. Sharma said that the technical
assistant’s job is primarily agricultural extension work – informing
farmers about new technology, fertiliser use and so on. Data gathering
was limited to a few conversations with a few village pradhans once a
month.

The other source pointed out by Dr Singh is the Mahalanobis National
Crop Forecasting Centre in Delhi, established by the central
government in 2012 to use satellite imagery to prepare crop forecasts
and assess damage caused by droughts and other weather phenomena.
“It’s a very accurate system and its findings are combined with data
from the field staff,” he said.

But the most sophisticated satellite in space – which India does not
possess – can at best generate images at a 0.41 metre resolution. This
can help tell the difference between a car and a scooter. Standing on
an empty plot, or even observing Dheerpal and his family scattering
seeds in Sainjhani, it is difficult to tell which crop they were
sowing.

The third source was the field staff of the revenue department. Since
the department of agriculture has very few officers, it is the duty of
the lekhpal, or the village-level accountant of the revenue
department, to maintain a khasra (land use register) of the farmers.
The khasras are updated after the sowing and harvest each season and a
jinswar statement (sown area under various crops) sent to the higher
officials at the tehsil level, then compiled for the district and
finally the state. There are 33,000 lekhpals in Uttar Pradesh. Budaun
and Bareilly each have about 100 lekhpals for over 2,000 villages.

“We get our data from their records, which describe the overall crop
trend in each village,” said Yadav, the district agricultural officer,
Bareilly.

Play

But farmers said sightings of the lekhpal were very rare. “He sits in
his office and makes up the numbers,” said Rishipal Singh, a
50-year-old resident of Sainjhani. Sunil Kumar, a farmer from Gangola
village in Dataganj, another block of Budaun, said the same. “The
lekhpals sometimes talk to the pradhan but how does the pradhan know
what’s happening on everyone’s farm? Last year I finished sowing at
the start of January. This year it will be delayed.” Kumar has
finished sowing on an acre but still has three more to complete. In
the second week of December, he spent six hours in line at the local
bank and got only Rs 1,000 in the end.

The officials of the revenue department in both Budaun and Bareilly
admitted their surveys for the rabi season only begin in the second
week of January. “If I haven’t started my survey yet, how can I give
you any data?” Suresh Pal Singh, a lekhpal in Budaun said in
exasperation when pressed him for information. Then where did the
department’s data come from? “It might be a modified version of the
kharif estimates from September, or even last year’s rabi data,” he
said.

Ninety percent of Budaun's farmers have land holdings of less than 10 bighas.
Ninety percent of Budaun's farmers have land holdings of less than 10 bighas.
Sown area vs yields

The advance estimates, cursory as they are, tell us even less about
how sudden disruptions, economic or climatic, affect farmers and
agricultural production.

The data for sowing does not change dramatically at the end of each
season because farmers don’t have the luxury of leaving their fields
fallow. But the crop yield is affected by the inputs they are able to
purchase and use – something that government data does not capture.

Both farmers and input traders said yields this year would be low.
“Business in this market is down by 40%,” said Sumit Kumar Saxena, who
sells seeds and pesticides in Bareilly. “Many of us have two or more
trucks full of products sitting in the godowns.”

“The farmers can’t choose to skip an entire crop. He will definitely
sow but yields will reduce by at least 30%,” Saxena added.

In an uncharacteristic embrace of organic methods, the agriculture
department responded saying yields would be better this way.
“Scientific studies have shown that soil fertility improves if farmers
don’t use chemicals for one or two crop cycles,” said Vinod Kumar, the
Budaun agricultural officer.

Rishi Aggarwal, owner of the Chola Seed Store in Budaun. He said seed
and fertiliser sales had declined by sixty percent since the
demonetisation.
Rishi Aggarwal, owner of the Chola Seed Store in Budaun. He said seed
and fertiliser sales had declined by sixty percent since the
demonetisation.

Farmers like Rishipal Singh in Sainjhani also fault the technocrats in
the administration for a lack of understanding of how the ability to
take risks and withstand shocks varies between large and small
farmers. Singh, who grows sugarcane on his land in the kharif season,
said he didn’t have a contract with the local sugar mill, which would
have ensured fair prices for his produce. “The private traders will
give me Rs 250 per quintal if I take the old notes and only Rs 200 for
the new ones.”

While Rishipal Singh delayed cutting the cane hoping for a better
price, Sachpal Singh in the adjacent Qadar Chowk block appeared
unaffected by the note ban. His family of four brothers has a contract
with the sugar mill and receives payments in full directly into bank
accounts. “We were able to sow [wheat] early,” said Sachpal. “There
was some inconvenience but we made arrangements. The sowing has to be
done on time.”

The family owns 100 bighas (nearly 20 acres) of land. According to the
Budaun agricultural department, 90% of the district’s farmers own
under 10 bighas.

‘At best, an informed guess’
Unmindful of such nuances, Radha Mohan Singh, the Union Minister of
Agriculture, has cited the weekly rabi sowing data as a rejoinder to
criticism of the government’s demonetisation decision. “This is going
to directly benefit farmers and poor people,” he said.

But there are signs that the government itself does not trust the
data. On December 8, the Central Board of Excise and Customs slashed
the duty on wheat imports into the country from 10% to zero. Some
commentators read the decision as an admission by the government that
demonetisation might lead to a decrease in yields and overall
production across the country. The reduction in import duties was seen
as a preemptive move to avoid a further rise in wheat retail prices.
Earlier this year, private traders claimed that the Ministry
exaggerated last season’s wheat production by about 10 million tonnes,
which the ministry has refuted.

Himanshu, an associate professor of economics at the Jawaharlal Nehru
University, studies agricultural markets and issues of food security.
The Food Ministry, which oversees grain imports, has had problems with
agriculture ministry data for many years, he claimed.

The Food Ministry did not respond to Scroll’s request for a comment,
but the millers, who lobbied for the reduction in import duty, agreed
that this was the case. “By last May, wheat stocks with the mills had
dried up and we told the food ministry that the numbers weren’t
correct,” said Veena Sharma, secretary of the Roller Flour Millers
Federation Of India. “They reduced the duty from 25% to 10% in
September. But they realised that even this wouldn’t be enough.”

***Said Himanshu: “At best, the data is an informed guess by the
officials. The guess could very well be misinformed, too. At worst,
they could be cooking up the data.”*** [Emphasis added.]

All photos and video by Manas Roshan.


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