
Thank you, Mr. Vice-Chairman, for giving me this opportunity to
make my maiden speech. My family comes from Wardha and Shri Janeshwar
Mishraji, who is not here, mentioned about the Ashram of Gandhiji
which is Seva Gram and that is where my late grandfather Jamnalalji
invited Gandhiji in the early 1930s from Sabarmati near Ahmedabad.
Mr. Vice-Chairman, Sir, a lot has been said about this subject.
I would try not to repeat it and one of the ways, I will do it
is by concentrating on my region which is Vidarbha and which is
the cotton bowl of the country. So, I will talk about cotton,
Vidarbha and then, later on, a little bit about the economy and
the society.
We have heard
that suicides primarily are by small and marginal farmers. It
is very correct. We have also heard that like any commodity, Mr.
Vice-Chairman, industrial commodity, in the services sector, IT
or otherwise, only way one can be sustainable and one can survive
is when the selling price exceeds the total cost of production.
Keeping in mind States like Maharashtra and Vidarbha where less
than five percent of the land is irrigated, the chances of crop
failure are obviously very high. So, if you take the cost of production
of cotton in Maharashtra and Vidarbha, it is much, much higher
than other places including a State like Gujarat.
Wherever
a human life is lost unnaturally, it is a tragedy. But when someone
takes his own life, in my view, it is a catastrophe. And yet,
in recent years, we have seen thousands of farmers taking their
lives with numbing regularity. What should be done? Costs have
to come down or selling prices have to go up. For the time being,
I would not worry about the consumer and the customer; though
on onion prices, Governments have changed. But let’s leave
it aside because here, we are not talking of the production of
an industrial commodity, we are talking of 65 per cent of the
population of this country. They are consumers as well as producers.
We have heard enough that if you don’t take care of the
farmer, how will India move forward? I fully share that view because
we are all inter-dependent.
The Minimum
Support Price for cotton in some States, has been lower than the
cost of production. As Shri Arjun Senguptaji was rightly saying,
MSP is fixed to ensure that a farmer, at least, gets something
more than his cost - cost-plus approach. Mr. Vice-Chairman, the
2004-05 report of the Commission for Agricultural Costs and Prices
estimated the cost per quintal of cotton – I won’t
give too many figures, only three figures at Rs.1643 in Gujarat,
Rs.2229 in Karnataka and Rs.2216 in Maharashtra. But there was
naturally only one Minimum Support Price and, in that year, that
was Rs.1960. Cost being above MSP does seem to explain and, at
least, it is one major reason for the distress in Maharashtra
and Karnataka. In Gujarat, because the cost was lower than the
MSP, we have not heard of that many or, if any, suicides from
there.
So, the first
point I am making, Mr. Vice-Chairman, is that you can take care
of debt items—and I will come to that in a moment –
but all those are temporary measures of help today, tomorrow.
If you are to keep selling your product, in this case, cotton,
or any other agricultural product, at a price lower than the cost
of production, no amount of debt can take care because ultimately,
the debt has to be repaid. Ek bar maf kar denge, do bar maf kar
denge, interest ko bhi chod denge, lekin paise kahan se ayenge?
Chahe budgetary support yeh kam kare, bank kare, ooper se to paise
nahi ayenge kyon ki yeh to tax payers ka paise hein. So, ultimately,
the farmer must make a profit. Yes, I will talk a little about
the private moneylender, about whom much has not been said except
some passing reference by a few speakers.
I may also
mention, Sir, that in 2004-05, the Maharashtra Government offered
prices of around Rs.2,500/- per quintal. Very good. But, then,
it became unsustainable for their budget. Sir, in 2005-06, they
reduced the price to Rs.1,980/-. I have already referred to the
cost of production, in Maharashtra, of cotton, which was higher
than Rs. 1,980/-. And the result is for all of us to see. Of course,
Sir, I cannot say to my Agriculture Minister that he has been
unfair to Vidarbha and partial to Western Maharashtra! That would
be a very unfair comment, Sir, because I come from Vidarbha and
he comes from Western Maharashtra! But that is a fact of life.
Even when we have had a Chief Minister like Vasantrao Naik, who
was from Vidarbha, probably not much was done because he did not
have that strength.
Private moneylenders,
Sir, when do they lend money? When the banks and the cooperative
societies do not lend. The marginal farmer has not paid his loans.
He cannot get loans elsewhere. Also, the moneylender is not only
supplying inputs. He is also now buying the output. So, he has
a stranglehold on the farmer. I understand that, nowadays, they
are charging as much interest as 60 per cent per annum. Sir! I
think, Manohar Joshiji or someone else mentioned 30 per cent.
Sometimes, they charge 60 per cent. At 60 per cent, even the best-run
industrial establishment will fold. Whether he charges two per
cent, four per cent or six per cent, is not the point. The question
is — I don’t understand it, Sir; maybe, the Agriculture
Minister will tell me — that there is the Bombay Moneylenders’
Act. 1946. Our Agriculture Minister was, probably, four years
old at that time, Sir, and I was a little older! Now, that Act
says that if the moneylender is not licensed, he cannot recover
his loan; he cannot go to courts, and if he is licensed, the total
outstanding amount cannot be more than twice the loan. And it
also specifies the rate of interest. I do not know why my State
Government is not taking advantage of that Act. There must be
some reason for that.
Rajnathji
rightly referred to the WTO. I do not want to take too much time
on that. I would only say this. When we talk of market prices,
we talk of normal market prices. The international cotton prices
are not normal. US$4 billion dollars, Rs.18,000 crores, is the
subsidy provided by the US alone to just its cotton farmers. The
total subsidy for farmers by the OECD countries is US$ 350 billion.
Cotton farmers get Rs.18,000 crores there. My farmer, in Vidarbha
also, maybe, can compete with the American farmer, but he cannot
compete with the United States Treasury. Kamal Nathji, in some
other context, rightly said that he can compete with the wheat
imported, or any other commodity, in the agricultural area, but
he cannot compete with the subsidies which a country like the
United States provides. And because of this, I come to my recommendations,
Sir.
In the short-term
recommendations — Mr. Arjun Sengupta said about the import
duty — first of all, Sir, I am referring to the import duty
on cotton which is not produced in this country. If it is not
produced, nobody gets hurt. And the textile mill people are very
influential people. You know, industrialist, big industrialist,
not people like me, small industrialists, Arjunji. So, fine.
But when
cotton is produced in this country, if we import cotton from a
country which subsidises its cotton farmers, then we must have
an anti-dumping duty. I don’t understand why it is not there.
It would be WTO compliant.
If there
are no cotton imports from such countries, fine. I am just saying,
if there is cotton import, which is a subsidised variety, then
I must have a countervailing duty.
Sir, why
don’t we hear about suicides from Gujarat? One reason is
that, obviously, 40 per cent of the land is irrigated. In Vidarbha,
it is four per cent. It is important that in Gujarat farmers normally
also have some other income from dairying, vegetables, etc. which
they supply to the nearby industrial centres. That does not exist
in Vidarbha.
Sir, I believe
that the relationship between agriculture and industry is symbiotic.
A prosperous agriculture develops industry and a prosperous industry
develops agriculture incomes. I strongly believe that India can’t
move forward, unless its farmers move forward; and the growth
is only of value, when it is inclusive.
Sir, the
irony of the fact is that the cotton economy in our country has
good growth in demand ahead of it. The domestic market is growing
and with the end of Multi-Fibre Agreement, though China has benefited
quite a bit, a very large market has opened abroad for us also.
Our exports of cotton clothes are growing and we have further
potential to grow.
Mr. Chairman,
Sir, may I suggest six short-term measures and two medium-term
measures? I am not referring to the long-term measure because
John Maynard Keynes said,” In the long run, we are all dead”.
My six short-term measures — some of them are being implemented
or will be implemented or have been announced by the Government
— are: One, a one year moratorium on repayment of dept owed
to private money-lenders. This has been done for six months or
so by the Andhra Pradesh Government. A two-year moratorium —
I am saying only a moratorium because I don’t want to start
a bad example of non-payment of loans — on repayment to
cooperative institutions and banks, especially, by small farmers
whose holdings are below two hectares and whose loan is below
Rs. 1 lakh. But the banks must step in to help such farmers. Two,
Immediate disbursal of, at least, Rs. 1 lakh to the families of
each farmer who has committed suicide. I don’t want this
to be misused. However, if you ask ten kinds of questions like
whether he has committed suicide or whether he was murdered or
whether he died in an accident, he will never get this money.
Three, there should be a declaration that private money-lenders
and the private sector man can’t charge interest above a
certain rate, whatever the Government thinks fit, I would even
say 20 per cent. Four, all land transfers that have been made
in the last two or three years should be reviewed, and if the
cause of such land transfers was exorbitant interest rate, then
it should be considered, within the laws of the country, whether
that transaction can be invalidated; and, of course, the lender
should be repaid his loan. Five, a review of the Minimum Support
Price of cotton and the appointment of the Maharashtra Cotton
Procurement Federation, in addition to the Cotton Corporation
of India, as an agent to procure cotton at the MSP. Six, anti-dumping
duty—I referred to it already—should be levied on
cotton, if cotton, which is subsidized, is imported.
Sir, the
two medium term proposals are; One, to increase irrigation in
the region through irrigation schemes and villager level initiatives
to conserve rain run-off. Mr. Sitaram Yechury and Shrimati Brinda
Karat are not here. Two, as I said, the relationship between agriculture
and industry is symbiotic. So, we must encourage industrialization
in these areas.
Sir, we have
60 per cent of the population living on agriculture. America has
only two per cent of its population living on agriculture and
it produces more than what it needs. Today, we are employing 60
percent in agriculture. But we can’t continue to absorb
60 per cent in agriculture. It may not be two per cent. It may
come down to 40 per cent or 30 per cent or 20 per cent. Where
will the surplus persons go? They have to go to industry and they
have to go to the service sector which are complementary to each
other. So, I would suggest that we must encourage industrialization
in these backward areas by providing infrastructure. This is what
is required. Industry does not want fiscal incentives. In fact,
that distorts our decision-making.
In Himachal
and Uttaranchal, I was against extending the benefits given by
three years; that distorts the situation. Even I am going there.
I didn’t want to, but there are such benefits that you cannot
ignore them. Sir, in these backward areas, if we provide the right
infrastructure, and, my friends may not like it, a flexible labour
policy – don’t give them in areas where I am already
there, but only in these backward areas – then, a lot of
industries will come up in these areas, and both agriculture and
industry would benefit.
What we need
are a few, but effective measures. In our governance, we have
come to be obsessed sometimes with the form, and we are unmindful
of substance. There are, for example, 29 Government Resolutions
of the Maharashtra Government on Cotton as of 24th May, this year.
I don’t know whether they are only on paper. I may add that
someone has to be responsible to implement all these plans. Right
now, everyone from PMO downwards is responsible which means, perhaps,
no one is responsible. I would suggest, especially for Maharashtra,
that a Cabinet Minister level or a Deputy Chief Minister level
person is appointed, and this position be created in Maharashtra
with the sole responsibility of improving the state of agriculture
in Vidarbha. A young and a dynamic person—he is not here;
otherwise, he will shout at me – Shri Praful Patel, who
is considered to be one of the best Ministers in the Centre, should
be given this responsibility.
Sir, since
this is my maiden speech, I seek your indulgence in saying a few
words to outline my broad perspective on our economy and society.
We pledged at our independence to take India forward. We have
taken it forward, but nowhere near as much as it can be taken,
or where it was capable. The glass is still only half filled.
We still have unspeakable poverty, which was referred to by Dr.
Arjun Kumar Sengupta, where 28 per cent of our people, that is,
300 million people, are living on less than one dollar a day ,
a poverty which crushes human dignity, stalking our land. Our
poor governance, in my view, has, by and large, been a drag on
our development. It is the tenacious spirit of India, alive in
the hearts and minds of every Indian, whether he is a worker,
farmer, businessmen, entrepreneur, or, I do not know whether I
should say, politician, and their spirit, hard work and entrepreneurial
ability which have taken and continue to take our country forward.
I believe
that we stand at a propitious moment in the history of our nation.
While we acknowledge the challenges, -- there are many challenges
– a world or opportunity also awaits us. As you know, in
the world, India is not just a flavour of the week or the month
or the year. We are the flavour of the times. Previously, it was
only China. Now it is China and India.
Both in the
services and manufacturing sector, we are poised to gain from
the developments in the world economy. We are becoming internationally
competitive despite the serious handicaps of lack of infrastructure,
right from social infrastructure, health, education, drinking
water, sanitation and of course, physical infrastructure. The
key reason, however, for my optimism, as I said, Sir, is the quality
and entrepreneurship of our people. Though low as a percentage
of our population, we must strive to increase this. We have the
world’ largest pool of smart, hardworking manpower, be it
in IT, manufacturing or finance. And, this is very important and
we are conscious of it that demographically, we will remain a
country of the young even in 2025. We have to ensure that we encash
this demographic dividend by investing in their education and
their skills. With education and skill, India will become a great
country; we shall capture the world in the next 25 years. But
if our youth are not educated, are not skilled, instead of becoming
a great asset, they will become a great liability. Sir, we need
good governance to achieve these goals of inclusive economic growth.
This will come from changes at the top and pressures from below
The pressure
from below will increase, as economic and social development make
our people more self-assured and more articulate. The reopening
of the Jessica Lall and Mattoo cases, under intense public pressure,
bodes well for our democracy. Democracy is not just elections.
Democracy is active participation by every citizen in the affairs
of the state, and the state exists essentially to provide public
goods and services to its citizens.
In this connection,
in passing, Mr. Chairman, Sir,--I have no time to go into details
– I would like to add that to ensure that we can take hard
decisions, the Lok Sabha and all the State Assemblies should go
to elections simultaneously; co-terminuously, and only once in
five years. We should also ensure that a vote of no-confidence
in the Leader of the House, the Chief Minister or the Prime Minister
should be, like Germany, which is a democratic country, accompanied
by a vote-of-confidence in an alternate party and person.
Sir, quality
of leadership is crucial in determining outcomes. Leadership is
not just a matter of charisma or showmanship or public relations.
But it is
of understanding today, it is of envisioning a better tomorrow
and having the confidence in oneself and of one’s team to
make our future happen. Leaders are those that deliver better
outcomes. Occupying a chair does not make us a leader.
Sir, Gandhiji
occupied no chair but led the country from subjugation to freedom,
striding like a colossus in our hearts and minds. We will do well,
may I say so, Sir, in all humility, to remember Gandhiji’s
teachings of the seven social sins – wealth without work,
pleasure without conscience, education without character, commerce
without morality, science without humanity, worship without sacrifice
and politics without principles.
In my view,
precisely, because we have ignored these teachings that we have
under-achieved
In this august
House, I will endeavour in all humility to play the role that
the Constitution envisaged each Member to play. That is, on behalf
of the people of India, hold the Government accountable. No more,
no less. We have enough good laws. What we lack is speed and justice
in their implementation. I would like to consider myself as representing
a large political spectrum. Three of the major parties in Maharashtra
supported me as an independent; and my family is steeped in the
Gandhian culture, and this gives me a lot of pride. So, I will
try to be even handed as an independent, with right and wrong
for the country being the sole yardstick for holding an opinion,
though I may be mistaken at times.
In conclusion,
Sir, coming into this august House, I am conscious of my responsibilities
to the nation. Panditji’s ‘Tryst with Destiny”
reverberates inside my mind. I have come here to try to help in
all humility redeem the pledge that was taken by our founding
fathers. So, may God give me the strength to make a difference!
I get a strong feeling, Sir, that I can bank on the support of
both sides of this august House.
Thank you, Sir.