Live
- Memorandum submitted to Rly Min Somanna on farmer issues
- Police arrests 10 cyber fraudsters
- Murder-dacoity case in Pitampura Citing
- TTD to release Rs 300 special darshan for Vaikuntha dwara darshans today
- BJP's 'chargesheet' against Kejriwal
- Restrictions Imposed Near Chikkadpally Police Station as Allu Arjun Set to Appear
- Gold rates in Delhi today stable, check the rates on 24 December, 2024
- Gold rates in Visakhapatnam today slashes, check the rates on 24 December, 2024
- Heavy Police Deployment Outside Allu Arjun’s Residence in Hyderabad
- Gold rates in Hyderabad today slashes, check the rates on 24 December, 2024
Just In
Urban-rural integration, the way forward
Many social thinkers-Gandhians and others have stressed the need to adopt a village-centred growth strategy
Many social thinkers-Gandhians and others have stressed the need to adopt a village-centred growth strategy. The argument is that we cannot bear the economic load of urbanisation; that urban living is impersonal and uproots human relationships; and that urbanisation is synonymous with centralised governance in which people are disempowered. It is contended that local production for local needs is the ideal that we should move towards. The problem, however, is that recent advances in technology have reduced transport costs to such a degree that the meaning of 'local' has been transformed. In the new technological scenario, instead of trying to revive our villages, we must focus on humanising our cities.
The hard fact is that transport technology determines whether a particular item will be produced in the village or the city. This can be shown by an example. The rice which is earmarked for village consumption is milled in the mini rice mill in the village. But the rice meant for consumption in the city is milled in large rice mills almost always located near the city. The paddy has to be transported from the village to the city for consumption. It can be milled in the village and the rice can be transported to the city. Alternatively, the paddy can be transported to the city, milled in the city and rice supplied to the city. Now, if the rice has to be milled in the village, then only a small rice mill is sufficient for milling the rice grown in a village. The cost of milling in a small rice mill is more and the quality of rice produced is relatively poor. There is also a loss of rice bran. Thus, milling the paddy in the village is costly and businesspersons prefer to transport the paddy from the village to the large rice mill in the city.
In contrast, a sugar mill is almost always established in a rural area. Reason is that 10 kg of cane is required to produce 1 kg of sugar. Thus, it costs less to transport 10 kg of cane a short distance to a rural sugar mill and then transport 1 kg of sugar long distance to the city. It would cost much more to transport 10 kg of cane long distance to an urban sugar mill and then transport 1 kg of sugar short distance to the nearby city. The total cost of transportation of cane and sugar combined is much less if a sugar factory is located in a rural area. Thus, we see that rice mills are established in cities and sugar mills in the rural areas. For this reason, we simply cannot establish industries that are not dependent on high-weight agricultural products in the villages. In this way the development of transport technology has killed the village.
Roads have now been constructed in the tribal areas; electricity has reached those in the desert; and villages of Haryana get the water from Himachal. The number of products that can be produced in a village competitively has shrink drastically. At one time the village had its own potter and smith. Nowadays, they buy plastic pitchers and machine-made implements. The village cannot also now manage its agriculture in a standalone manner because diesel, water and electricity are now obtained from the city. It is uneconomical for the village to maintain these 'local' trades now because it is more economical to pay Rs 20 to a roadways bus conductor and get the same product from the city. The village trades have but to die as also the myth of an autonomous village.
The same holds for self-governance. Once the life of the citizen is integrated with the city -TV, electricity, and motorcycle -the area of autonomy of the 'local' community stands reduced. Needless to say, the cities are also not able to practice self-governance. The supply of petrol is from other countries, the electricity grid has become national, and drinking water is brought often from other States. Self-governance is not practicable today in the village or the city.
It is necessary to make large investments in the centralised industries to protect our economic sovereignty. Canal irrigation, electricity and television requires heavy investment in centralised industry. The nation has to make a difficult choice. We can use our output to first build our power stations; or to build our villages. The problem is that if we take up village development first then we will perpetually condemn ourselves to backwardness of the clay pots and wooden ploughs.
This compulsion had forced our pre-Independence leaders explicitly state in the Bombay Plan made in the forties that the investment in industry will come mainly from the surplus extracted from agriculture. We have then two choices--we either have to 'exploit' our villages while we invest our surplus in industry so that we break free of the dependence on foreign capital; or we can take up village development and surrender our economic sovereignty to the global capital.
Instead of trying to revive our villages, we must instead focus on humanising our cities. A half-way possibility is to revive the small towns instead of focussing only on the large cities. The cost of provision of services such as electricity, piped water and bus routes will perhaps be only marginally more than the cost of supplying these services in the cities; while it will be substantially less than supplying these services in the villages. I had an occasion to see certain documents of the Rajasthan government about 20 years ago that said that the cost of supplying piped water in the villages was 10 times that of supplying the same in the cities. Perhaps the cost of supplying piped water in the small towns will only be double of the cost of supplying in the cities. This increase in cost can perhaps be borne.
The small towns can become suppliers of services such translations, online tutorials, music and call centres. Living conditions such as a pollution-free environment can also be more easily provided here. There is greater interpersonal interaction as well. The town dweller often knows his vegetable vendor by name, for example. There is a huge movement from the city centres to the suburbs in the developed countries for these reasons. We can move in that direction.
Agriculture basically is a sunset area. However, Netherlands is producing tulips, France is producing grapes and Italy is producing olives of good quality with international markets. The way to revive the both the small towns and villages is to undertake research on niche agricultural products like pepper in Kerala and apples in Kullu. The town of Chhutmalpur in UP is a huge supplier of vegetables from the nearby villages. Such small towns supplying gladiolus and rose flowers can certainly be developed.
(The writer is formerly Professor of Economics at IIM, Bengaluru)
© 2024 Hyderabad Media House Limited/The Hans India. All rights reserved. Powered by hocalwire.com