With Rising Cow Vigilantism, India’s Leather Industry Takes A Hit

In most attacks using the holy cow as a pretext, the victims were either Muslim or Dalit.

Nilesh Jain
India
Published:
The ban on cattle sale for slaughter hit the once-flourishing leather industry and its poorest employees, especially Muslims and Dalits. Image used for representational purpose.
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The ban on cattle sale for slaughter hit the once-flourishing leather industry and its poorest employees, especially Muslims and Dalits. Image used for representational purpose.
(Photo Courtesy: Pixabay/IndiaSpend)

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Exports of India’s leather industry declined more than 3 percent in financial year 2016-17 and 1.30 percent in the first quarter of 2017-18, according to the latest available figures, compared to a growth of more than 18 percent in 2013-14, according to an IndiaSpend analysis of trade data.

Export growth slowed to 9.37 percent in 2014-15 and declined more than 19 percentage points in 2015-16, the data show.

(Photo Courtesy: IndiaSpend)

The leather industry employs 2.5 million people nationwide, most of them Muslim or Dalit. India’s leather industry accounts for 9 percent of the world’s footwear production and for 12.93 percent of the world’s leather production of hides/skins.

The ban on cattle sale for slaughter hit the once-flourishing leather industry and its poorest employees, especially Muslims and Dalits, The Hindustan Times reported on 25 June 2017.

Leather exports shrank from $6.49 billion in 2014-15 to $5.66 billion in 2016-17, 12.78 percent lower than financial year 2014-15. China, on the other hand, reported a 3 percent increase in exports of leather and footwear, from around 76 billion to $78 billion in 2017.

Cow-Related Violence Hitting Leather Industry

“There is a 5 percent-6 percent decline in domestic supply following the reduction in cattle slaughter in the country,” Council for Leather Exports chairman Rafeeque Ahmed was quoted as saying in this report by The Times of India on 4 February 2016.

The index of industrial production – which measures economic activity and has specified weightage for industries–for the leather products declined 2 points in 2015-16, after a growth of nearly 14 points in 2014-15, data show.

(Photo Courtesy: IndiaSpend)

As production and leather exports declined, cow-related violence increased from one attack each in 2012 and 2013 to three in 2014, jumping to 37 in 2017, the worst year yet for such violence.

The rise in such violence is particularly apparent from 2015 when farm worker Mohammad Akhlaq Saifi was killed in Uttar Pradesh . After the Akhlaq murder, 10 more died in 2015 in 12 cow-related violent incidents, eight in 2016 in 24 incidents, 11 in 2017 and seven in 2018 till date, Factchecker.in data show.

The rise of cow-related incidents and fall in exports of leather goods appear to be interconnected outcomes of the government’s policies.

The Impending Failure of Make-In-India Leather-Industry Targets

One of the aims of prime minister Narendra Modi’s Make In India programme was to increase leather exports to $9 billion by 2020, from $5.86 billion in 2015-16, and grow the domestic market to $18 billion from the present $12 billion.

After the first reported death in cow-related violence in India, the country waited for a response from prime minister Narendra Modi, which came on 8 October 2015, in the form of this statement referring to communal harmony and poverty.

“Hindus should decide whether to fight Muslims or poverty. Muslims have to decide whether to fight Hindus or poverty. Both need to fight poverty together,” Modi said at an election rally in Bihar, The Hindu reported on 8 October 2017.

The country has to stay united, only communal harmony and brotherhood will take the nation forward. People should ignore controversial statements made by politicians, as they are doing so for political gains.
Prime Minister Narendra Modi

In most attacks using the holy cow as a pretext, the victims were either Muslim or Dalit. While 115 Muslims were attacked between 2014 and 2018, 23 Dalits were attacked between 2016 and 2017. The worst year for Dalits was 2016, as they made up 34 percent of the victims in cow-related violence that year.

(Photo Courtesy: IndiaSpend)
(Photo Courtesy: IndiaSpend)
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Of the incidents, 51 percent occurred in BJP-ruled states, while Congress-ruled states accounted for 11 percent.

Nearly all the victims of cow-related violence are from low-income families that depend on either agriculture or the cattle or meat trade, reports said.

Conflict Between BJP Manifesto and Economics

In May 2017, the central government amended the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals (Regulation of Livestock Market) Rules, 2017, banning the sale of cattle for slaughter in animal markets across India, a further blow to the leather-goods industry.

In its 2014 election manifesto, the BJP had promised the necessary legal framework to protect the “cow and its progeny”. The cow is a holy animal, called “mother” in Hindu scripture.

The May 2017 notification was withdrawn in October 2017 and subsequently revised after a discussion by a group of ministers headed by transport minister Nitin Gadkari.

Cattle ownership among Muslim households is 18.6 percent, 40 percent among Sikhs, 32 percent among Hindus and 13 percent among Christians, Mint reported on 24 July, 2018.

Around 63.4 million Muslims (or 40 percent of Muslims in the country) eat beef or buffalo meat. Overall, 80 million Indians eat beef or buffalo meat, including 12.5 million Hindus. Only 15 percent households own non-milch animals in India.

If India bans the slaughter of cattle completely, the outcome can be a “serious threat” to its economy, the Hindu Business Line reported on 9 July 2017.

“Each year, 34 million male calves are born in this country,” Vikas Rawal, an economist with the Jawaharlal Nehru University, was quoted as saying. “If we assume that they live for eight years, which is actually on the lower side, there would be nearly 270 million additional unproductive cattle by the end of eight years.”

“The additional outgo for looking after these cattle would be Rs. 5.4 lakh crore, 35 times the annual animal husbandry budgets of the Centre and all States put together”.

(This was first published on IndiaSpend and has been republished with permission.)

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