However, despite the significance of agriculture in the lives of the Pakistani masses, the majority of our agricultural development policies have focused on elite driven models of economic growth. Such myopic policymaking, however, contrasts significantly with prevalent realities. Consider, for instance, findings of the latest agricultural census, which highlighted a significant increase in the proportion of marginal and small farmers in our rural areas. Such an increase is not due to any redistributive land reform initiative launched by the government to resume large tracts of land held by landlords, but rather due to the fragmentation of land into smaller pieces due to intergenerational inheritance.
The latest census data shows that while marginal farms now account for almost 44 per cent of farms, these small farms own merely eight per cent of the total farm area in the country. These numbers do not include the multitudes of sharecroppers and agricultural labourers, including women, who own no land at all.
Due to the lack of sufficient land, families of an increasing number of small and marginal farmers are migrating to urban areas hoping to escape poverty. Unfortunately, increasing migration from rural areas is exerting more pressure on cities which are grappling with the need to provide basic infrastructure and services to their burgeoning population. Lack of opportunities will compel a majority of this rural influx to end up working in the informal sector. Earning extremely low wages, these rural migrants will not be able to adequately meet the needs of their children and the cycle of poverty will persist.
Instead of trying to launch another capital-intensive green revolution spearheaded by the landed elite with the aim of boosting exports, Pakistan needs a bottom-up approach to agricultural development which emphasises national food security and relies on increasing the productivity of smaller farmers. Instead of relying on market-based strategies and encouraging agribusinesses to invest in agriculture, our government needs to ensure that landless farmers are given state land grants rather than military officers, along with paying attention to supplemental policies improving their access to irrigation water, credit and markets.
Instead of trying to encourage corporate farming, rural development planners need to pay attention to small and medium-sized farmers (owing land below 25 acres), who constitute 94 per cent of the total number of farms and over 60 per cent of the total farm area.
For raising small farmer yields, creation of a Small Farmer Development Corporation (SFDC), owned by small farmers and run by professionals as a social enterprise, has been proposed. An entity such as the SFDC could provide the needed support to smaller farmers to help boost their household incomes and improve overall agricultural productivity.
It is time to discard reliance on the landed elite who have done little to boost agricultural productivity and instead used their control over land to capture rural vote banks and influence policymaking to their own advantage.
Published in The Express Tribune, February 14th, 2014.
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COMMENTS (5)
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@Isloboy: You are mistaken. Please read some book on history of sub-continent to find out how the waderas and other large land owners acquired their wealth by conniving with the British and enforcing their writ in collecting local taxes. The most loyal were rewarded by the British with huge land holdings. If anything, all these land should be repossessed and auctioned off.
Good luck doing that. Do you even know how much land is owned by the vultures.
Big land owners in Pakistan are those people, who have snatched the land of the people who migrated to India. Hence, because they have received the land for free, they don't have the higher regard for it. While, what India did was it gave all such land to Wakf Board and ensured that the land goes to smaller farmars.
Sage advice indeed!
But is it not over half a century too late?
too much generalized..... seems like I am reading a chapter of a course book.