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The potato farmers in Aligarh, Uttar Pradesh are an unhappy lot. Their produce sold for over 900 rupees per quintal last year, but 2017 has brought wholesale prices crashing down by half.
In the potato hub of Iglas in Aligarh, we meet 33-year-old farmer Saurabh Singh. He has a four-year-old daughter and a son aged seven. Singh took loans from banks as well as private moneylenders to be able to buy a tractor a couple of years ago. The downturn this year has prevented him from paying not just his loan installments but also his children’s school fees.
“First, there was demonetisation. Potatoes which sold at 800 rupees per quintal previously were not being bought for even 200 rupees after 8 November 2016. And now, the drastic fall in prices this year. I haven’t been able to pay a single installment of my loans since demonetisation. And the interest is accumulating, my debts are rising.”
Farmers complain that costs incurred on cultivating the crop are greater than the prices they are selling the potatoes at, leading to heavy losses and rising debts. Input costs have increased too. In Iglas for example, cold storage facilities hiked their fees this year from 242 rupees to 262 rupees per quintal.
Potato growers that The Quint spoke to in Uttar Pradesh are now accusing both central and state governments of neglecting them. At the root of the problem though, is neither poor growing conditions nor the lack of storage facilities. Instead, it’s quite the contrary.
In terms of potato produce, 2017 has been a good year. In terms of farmers’ fortunes, not so much. So why is a good harvest hurting those growing the crop?
For the crop year between July 2015 and June 2016, India’s potato production stood at 43.4 million tonnes. This year’s output though is estimated to have touched 47 million tonnes, just behind the all-time high witnessed in 2014.
The output in Uttar Pradesh, India’s top potato producing state, has been projected to increase to 15 million tonnes this year from 13.8 million tonnes last year.
At Tehra village in Aligarh’s Iglas, 41-year-old farmer Gajender Singh gives us a breakdown of his expenses.
His neighbour and fellow potato farmer Bijender Singh quips, “We’re only getting as much or less when the wholesalers come to buy our stock. Because we are selling at anywhere between 350 and 450 rupees a quintal, we’re running into losses and going deeper in debt. We aren't getting our due. The government has to take measures to fix this. It is their responsibility.”
In early April, the Yogi Adityanath government said it would buy 1 lakh metric tonnes of potatoes at a rate of Rs 487 per quintal. The move, to be implemented under the Market Intervention Scheme (MIS), was to provide relief to hard-hit potato farmers. The cabinet assured the farmers that potato procurement would begin immediately.
But VM Singh, chief of the Rashtriya Kisan Mazdoor Sanghatan, says Yogi Adityanath is yet to walk the talk.
Singh says he speaks for the farmers when he demands that it be made illegal to buy potatoes at less than the MIS price. “Those who do so must be booked and FIRs lodged.”
Forty-eight-year-old potato and bajra farmer Mukesh Kumar is resentful as well. “I voted for the BJP in the 2014 general election as well as this year’s state polls. But wait for 2019. I will not vote for the BJP. Despite us being in dire trouble, the government is doing nothing to help the farmers.”
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