FOR
AGRICULTURAL
EXTENSION
GOVERNMENT
OF INDIA
POLICY FRAMEWORK FOR AGRICULTURAL
EXTENSION
CONTENTS
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3. |
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3.3.1 Policy Reforms |
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3.3.6
Empowerment of Farmers |
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3.3.10
Changing
role of Government |
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1.1
Rapid agricultural growth continues to be the key to poverty alleviation
and overall economic development. Agriculture accounts for about one-fourth of
the Gross Domestic product and is the source of livelihood or nearly two-thirds
of the population. The agriculture
sector in India has been successful in keeping pace with the rising food demand
of a growing population, expected to cross one billion. Foodgrains production
more than quadrupled since the early 1950s from 51 million tons to over 209
million tons in 2000, while population nearly tripled from 350 million to one
billion during the same period.
1.2 The Green Revolution has been the cornerstone of India’s agricultural
achievement, transforming the country from one of food deficiency to
self-sufficiency. While recognizing the impact of the Green Revolution in
imparting dynamism to the agriculture sector, it must be recognized that the
Green Revolution remained restricted to the well-endowed irrigated areas of the
country. Of late, deceleration in production and of factor productivity growth
in some of the major irrigated production systems, especially in the North and
North-West regions, have been recorded. Potentially high production areas
(Eastern and Central States) are still lagging behind in productivity increases.
Moreover, in the area of agricultural research, the success has been
restricted to selected crops. Even
in this arena, a growing disparity between the actual and the potential yields
points to a crucial gap between research and extension.
1.3
Public research and extension played a major role in bringing about the
Green Revolution. In the post-Green Revolution era, however, extension faces
important challenges in the areas of relevance, accountability and
sustainability. The changing
economic scenario in India and the need for appropriate agricultural
technologies and agro-management practices to respond to food and nutritional
security, poverty alleviation, diversifying market demands, export
opportunities, and environmental concerns is posing new challenges to the
technology dissemination systems. It is expected that future
agricultural growth would largely accrue from improvements in productivity of
diversified farming systems with regional specialisation and sustainable
management of natural resources, especially land and water. Effective linkages
of production systems with agro-processing and other value added activities
including marketing would play an increasingly important role in the
diversification of agriculture.
1.4 It is becoming increasingly evident that public extension by itself can
no longer respond to the multifarious demands of farming systems. There is need
for reappraisal of the capacity of agricultural extension to address,
effectively, contemporary and future needs of the farming community. Public
funding for sustaining the vast extension infrastructure is also under
considerable strain. Meanwhile, in
response to market demand the existing public extension network is inexorably
being complemented, supplemented and being replaced by private extension. As the
nature and scope of agricultural extension undergoes fundamental changes, the
outlook is for a whole new policy mix nurturing a plurality of institutions.
2
CHANGING ROLE OF AGRICULTURAL EXTENSION
2.1 Community Development Approach to Extension. Public sector extension
has undergone several changes since the early 1950s.
Beginning with the Community Development Programme in 1952 through the
National Extension Service in 1953, the focus of extension was on human and
community development, but there has been a steady progression towards
technology transfer, with the Intensive Agriculture District Programme started
in 1961-62, followed by the Intensive Agriculture Area Programme in 1964-65, the
High Yielding Varieties Programme 1966-67, the Farmers Training and Education
Programme 1966-67 and the Small and Marginal Farmers Development Programme in
1969-70.
2.2
Transfer of Technology Approach through T & V. The most
significant recent development was the introduction of the Training and Visit
(T&V) extension management system, starting in the mid-1970s. T&V
extension was well suited to the rapid dissemination of broad-based crop
management practices for the high yielding wheat and rice varieties that were
released since the mid-1960s. The
T&V system profoundly influenced extension practices and registered
impressive gains in irrigated areas, because of the similarity between the
agro-ecological conditions where technologies were generated and where they were
ultimately used, and the favourable socio-economic situations and developmental
infrastructure for their wider uptake. Indeed,
the T&V system played an important role in ushering in the Green Revolution.
2.3 Limitations of the T & V System. The
focus of the T & V system being
on disseminating Green Revolution technology for major cereal crops, extension
activities have been largely carried out by State Departments of Agriculture
(DOA). The other line departments,
such as the Departments of Animal Husbandry (DAH), Horticulture (DOH), and
Fisheries (DOF), have not been able to focus on extension due to lack of
infrastructure, trained personnel and resources. The T&V system operated
largely in the inter-personnel mode without planned and optimum utilisation of
information support and with low level of involvement of farmers. The "top-down" approach generated uniformity rather
than specificity and lacked focus on location specific needs of regions,
disadvantaged areas, target groups enterprises etc. Individual and institutional
issues under Human Resource Development, the training of researchers, subject
matter specialists and extension functionaries and farmers had not been
addressed adequately. The linkages between research-extension and farmer
remained weak or non-existent. Media and information management largely remained
in the public sector and characterized by centralized operations. Farmer driven
and farmer accountable feedback systems were not adequately developed.
2.4
Post-Green Revolution Period. The
transfer of T&V extension approach to rainfed farming areas where
fundamentally different production systems predominate and more importantly,
local conditions vary widely, resulted in serious limitations and failures. The
system well suited to the rapid dissemination of pre-set agronomic practices for
the high yielding wheat and rice varieties, failed to respond to the more
location-specific, risk-prone agriculture of the unirrigated tracts.
Similarly, extending the system to programmes for natural resource
management, sustainable agricultural practices such as integrated pest
management, integrated nutrient management and to diversified agriculture such
as high value horticulture, livestock activities and fisheries did not meet with
success. Nor could the T&V
system adapt to the more holistic Farming Systems Approach towards which the new
thrust of both research & extension had begun to focus.
2.5 Towards a Farming Systems Approach. The extension approaches of the 1950s and 1960s
centered around 'farmers' ignorance' as an explanation of non-adoption of
agricultural technology and therefore the extension policies remained confined
to “extension education” with the key activities related to “teaching”.
In the decade of the 1970s and 1980s, farm level constraints were considered to
be the explanation of non-adoption. The key activities of extension system were
confined to 'input supply' for removal of such farm level constraints.
The basic philosophy of these extension approaches centered on
“technology transfer”. By the
early 1990's and the completion of the third National Agricultural Extension
Project (NAEP), there was growing recognition that the T&V extension
approach needed to be overhauled in meeting the technology needs of farmers
during the 21st century. First, it
was recognised that extension should begin to broad base its programmes, by
utilising a Farming Systems approach. For
example, attention should be given to the needs of farmers in rainfed areas, and
to diversifying extension programmes into livestock, horticulture, and other
high value commodities that would increase farm incomes. Secondly, to support
and strengthen the Farming Systems approach, issues of financial sustainability,
farmer participation in programme planning, and research-extension linkages,
marketing and value addition would have to be concurrently addressed. Present
day agriculture is defined by key concepts of stability, sustainability,
diversification and commercialization. There is need for reorientation of the
philosophy of extension from technology transfer mode to technology application.
3.1 In the context of meeting the holistic needs of increasing agricultural
production, yet do so in a sustainable manner, agricultural extension has a
crucial role to play. Reforms in the system envisage an extension service more
broad-based and holistic in content and scope, thus beyond agricultural
technology transfer. Its normal task of transferring and disseminating
appropriate technologies and agronomic practices would not be sufficient.
Extension agencies, services and workers will need to exercise a more proactive
and participatory role, serve as knowledge/ information agents, initiating and
facilitating mutually meaningful and equitable knowledge based transactions
among agricultural researchers, trainers and primary producers. All this needs
to be done in an effective and cost efficient manner.
3.2 Technology generation and its application will have to focus more
strongly than before on the themes of optimization by producers of their
available resources, sustainability, coping with diversity by adapting
technology more specifically to agro-ecological or social circumstances aimed at
creation of a policy environment that promotes profitable, productive and
sustainable farming.
·
Institutional Restructuring
·
Management Reforms
·
Strengthening Research –Extension Linkages
·
Capacity building & Skill Upgradation
·
Empowerment of Farmers
·
Mainstreaming of Women in Agriculture
·
Use of Media & Information Technology
·
Financial Sustainability
·
Changing Role of Government
3.3.1.1 Farming Systems Approach.
Policy reforms in Agricultural Extension envisage the replacement of the
old single-discipline based, commodity-oriented approach of the T & V system
by the Farming Systems (FS) approach. The FS approach considers
the farm, the farm household and off-farm activities in a holistic way to take
care not only of farming but also aspects of nutrition, food security,
sustainability, risk minimisation, income and employment generation which make
up the multiple objectives of farm households. FS considers interdependencies of
the components under the control of members of the household as well as how
these components interact with the physical, biological and socio-economic
factors not under the household's control. The FS approach emphasises that research and
extension agendas should be determined by explicitly defined farmers' needs
through an understanding of the existing farming systems rather than perceptions
by research scientists or extension functionaries.
3.3.1.2 Multi-Agency Extension Service.
For many years agricultural extension was considered the monopoly of the public
sector. However, with the wide
range of demands for agricultural technology in the changing scenario there is growing recognition
that public extension by itself cannot meet the specific needs of various
regions and different classes of farmers. The new extension regime recognizes
the role of a multi-agency dispensation comprising different strengths. Policy
environment will promote private extension to operate in roles that complement,
supplement, work in partnership and even substitute for public extension. The
three arms of the agricultural extension network are:
·
ICAR extension (Zonal
Research Stations/ Krishi Vigyan Kendras, Agriculture Technology Information
Centres (ATICs), Institute Village Linkage Programme (IVLP) etc.)
·
Agri-Clinics & Agribusinesses
·
Input Suppliers/ Dealers (Pesticides, Seeds, Nutrients, Farm
Implements, etc.)
·
Corporate Sector (Commercial
Crops – tobacco, tea, coffee, oilseeds (sunflower), vegetables, Seeds, Farm
Implements – tractors, threshers, sprinklers, drip irrigation, etc.)
Mass Media
& Information Technology
·
Print Media – Vernacular Press
·
Radio, Television, Private Cable Channels, etc.
·
Electronic Connectivity through Computers, NICNET,
Internet, V-SAT, etc.
·
Farm Information and Advisory Centres (FIACs)
·
Private Portals
·
Public & Private Information Shops
3.3.1.3
Public extension services. Despite
the rise of the private sector in the provision of agro-services, such extension
will gravitate towards selected regions, crops and sectors where gains are to be
appropriated. Pure public goods, economically backward regions, small, marginal
farmers and landless labourers will not attract the for-profit private sector.
Public Extension will therefore continue to play a central role in technology
dissemination. For example, public extension should focus its efforts on those knowledge-based
technologies that are central to farmers’ concerns and that will maintain
the natural resource base. These are subject matter areas that are not likely to
be taken by the private sector. Examples include dissemination of production
management technologies that are specific to different crops and livestock
systems; natural resource management technologies, such as soil and water
management, integrated pest management, agro-forestry and other technologies
associated with sustainable development; and farming systems technologies,
including farm management skills that will enable farmers to improve their
efficiency, increase cropping intensities and to diversify into more high value
commodities in conformity with marketing trends.
3.3.1.4 Promotion of farmer participatory
approach. There is, therefore, need for a more farmer participatory approach
in working out the system description, problem diagnosis, search for appropriate
technology, designing the process of implementation, monitoring and evaluation,
and feedback. The extension agent is no longer seen as the expert who has all
the useful information and technical solutions; the indigenous technical
knowledge of farmers and their ingenuity, individually and collectively, are
recognized as a major source; and solution to local problems are to be developed
in partnership between the extension agent and farmers. Extension workers
therefore need new skills of negotiations, conflict resolution and mobilizing
and nurturing community organizations.
3.3.1.5 Promotion of demand-driven and
farmer-accountable extension. Under
the T&V system the technology dissemination regime was more supply-driven.
Research and extension agendas were pre-set based on technologies for
high-yielding varieties of wheat and rice. An important reason why research and extension organisations have not
focused on farmer problems is due to the lack of an effective feedback system.
The vast majority of small and marginal farmers in India, especially women, lack
an effective voice in influencing, research and extension priorities. Under the
new policy agenda a demand-driven extension system will be created, by providing
farmers with access to linkage mechanisms through which they would be provided
all relevant information/data to help them articulate their problems and needs
with reference to their production & marketing plans. A key factor in
improving these feedback systems is to organise farmers into functional groups,
such as Self-Help Groups (SHGs), Farmer Interest Groups (FIGs), Commodity
Associations (CAs), and/or other types of farmer organisations (FOs). These FOs
can provide, an effective channel for both the dissemination of technology to
large number of small and marginal farmers and feedback to research and
extension. Linkage mechanisms would also ensure meaningful
farmer representation in the governing bodies of public and private extension
services, farmer influence on decisions on the planning, implementation and
monitoring of public extension at local, regional and national levels and farmer
influence on the incentives of extension staff, including supervisors and
subject matter specialists.
3.3.1.6 Thrust on Marketing Extension.
Farmers have increasingly begun to perceive marketing rather than
production as the major constraint to enhancing farm incomes.
With major thrust of extension agencies on production techniques,
marketing extension so far has not received the attention it deserves. This
assumes greater significance in the light of the new international trading
regime under the WTO and the export opportunities being opened up.
Public extension functionaries are presently ill equipped to deal with
marketing extension. The
multi-agency extension service will need to address these issues through
strengthening capacity of the public agency, supporting private sector in
marketing extension and making extensive use of media and IT in information and
technology dissemination. Marketing
extension so far a peripheral issue in the extension scenario will need to be
brought centre-stage. Indeed,
production will now need to be significantly dictated by market requirements.
3.3.1.7
Enabling
Farmers for Problem Solving Skills. Under the new dispensation there
will be a paradigm shift from top-down blanket dissemination of technological
packages, towards providing producers with the knowledge and understanding with
which to solve their own location specific problems. This means that the existing public organizations should
improve their efficiency and effectiveness in research and technology
application. This will call for interdisciplinary approach aiming at
location-specificity of technical solution.
3.3.1.8
Encouraging Private Sector Involvement in Technology Transfer.
A significant deterrent to expansion of private sector involvement in
technology transfer is the provision of subsidized agro goods and services by
public agencies. This often leads
to the creation of an uneven playing field and discourages market entry by
private providers. Wherever
possible such subsidies will be phased out, in order to stimulate emergence of a
private input supply network to provide hybrid seeds, artificial insemination
services, fertilisers, agro-chemicals, animal feed, machinery and equipment, and
other agricultural supplies and services to farmers on a full cost recovery
basis. Generally, the costs
associated with the research, development and transfer of these material
technologies are embodied in the prices of these products, therefore, these
costs are passed along to farmers, making this component of the Agricultural
Technology System (ATS) financially sustainable. Targeted subsidies may be
retained to protect the interest of the poor and vulnerable sections. In the field of material
technology dissemination, which includes distribution of inputs such as
fertilizer, seed, planting material, chemicals for plant protection,
agricultural implements etc. a competitive private sector has developed in
almost all states except for the north-eastern states. The new policy agenda
envisages withdrawal of the public sector from areas where agro-services can be
effectively and competitively provided by the private sector. In such cases the
role of the public sector becomes one of facilitator and enabler. This implies
moving towards a realistic cost recovery of agro-services by the State. For, if
the public sector continues to subsidize the services, this will prevent a
“level playing field” to the private sector, which will ultimately get
crowded out. There will need to be a re-examination of existing Rules,
Regulations & Acts to abolish provisions, which constrain private investment
in delivery of agro-services.
3.3.1.9 Public funds for private extension
services. Promotion of private extension needs to be matched by
corresponding shifts in the allocation of public resources. Public funds would
be made available to NGOs, Farmer Associations, Para-professionals or private
foundations for extension work. An environment in which private investment in
technology generation and transfer is more attractive will, therefore, have to
be created.
3.3.1.10 Charging for extension services. The emergence of a market for
private extension advice or consultancy services will be encouraged.
Processors with contracted producers, also commercial suppliers of seed,
agro-chemicals, machinery, vaccines, artificial insemination and the like should
recover the costs of providing advice to their clients out of profit margins.
However, the vulnerable group will need to be protected through targeted
subsidies and safety nets.
3.3.2
Institutional Restructuring
3.3.2.1 It is clear that no one uniform extension system will serve as a panacea
to all States. Even within States
there will be a combination of various agencies and different institutional
arrangements to address needs of differing agro-climatic zones as well as
different sections of farmers. A menu of
various models will be available to the States to select and adapt to their
own requirements.
3.3.2.2 Restructuring Public Extension Public
Extension will continue to remain central to Technology Dissemination, small
& marginal farmers & economically backward regions will need to be
serviced by it. This implies that public extension functionaries (including VEWs
& SMSs) will have to be placed in new decentralized institutional
arrangements which are demand-driven, farmer-accountable, bottom-up and have a
Farming Systems Approach (broad-based). States have before them several models
namely, (i) the ATMA model (7 States) (ii) Single Window – Broad Based
extension model (Maharashtra), (iii) Panchayati Raj Institutions (Kerala, West
Bengal, Madhya Pradesh) and (iv) the SAU –Farmer Direct Contact (Punjab).
With supplementation from the private sector, media and Information
Technology the public extension service woulde be made leaner and professional.
It is envisaged that the approximately 100, 000 public extension
functionaries will be gradually reduced to be supported by the other two arms of
services providers.
3.3.2.3 District Level Agriculture
Technology Management Agency (ATMA) model. A key concept is to decentralize
decision-making to the district level through the creation of the ATMA as a
registered society. A second goal is to increase farmer input into program
planning and resource allocation, especially at the block level, and to increase
accountability to stakeholders. A
third major goal is to increase program coordination and integration between
departments so that the following program thrusts can be more effectively and
efficiently implemented.
1.
Farming
System Innovations—especially the intensification and/or
diversification into high value commodities and/or value-added marketing and
processing activities,
2.
Farmer
Organizations—especially for high value commodities and resource poor
farmers,
3.
Technology
Gaps in both crop and livestock production systems, and
4.
Natural
Resource Management—especially soils and waters management and to
reduce pesticide use through integrated pest management (IPM) programs.
5.
Marketing and Agro-processing Linkages between farmers’ groups, markets and private processors.
3.3.2.4 Strategic Research and Extension
Plans (SREPs) through Participatory Rural Appraisal (PRA).
In the process of creating a more bottom-up extension system,
PRA procedures would be introduced across all system levels (district, block,
mandal, and village), and across each participating line department (DOA, DOH,
DAH and Department of Marketing) and research institutions (ZRS and KVKs) within
the district. On the basis of PRA, Strategic Research Extension Plans would be
prepared for the districts. The district SREP must be grounded
at the block or mandal level, where extension programs can be fine-tuned to the
needs of farmers and more effectively implemented.
The SREP would take account of the research, training and extension
requirements for production as well as marketing activities.
The rural periodic markets and wholesale assembling markets where farmers
visit regularly would be used as important locations for dissemination of market
and production technologies.
3.3.2.5 Block/ Mandal Level Technology Centre for Single Window Extension System.
Concept of a Block (or Mandal) Technology Centre (BTC) has
emerged wherein a multidisciplinary technology team (comprising block level
agriculture, horticulture, soil & water conservation, agricultural marketing
and livestock extension officers) would be assigned to organise and implement
extension programs within the block. Other
line department units and personnel would continue to provide essential service
in developmental activities. In effect, the BTC would result in the functional
integration of extension activities within the block or mandal and, in effect,
become the operational arm of the ATMA. This
Centre would become the common meeting point for extension personnel from the
line departments to prepare integrated work plans (WPs) and to co-ordinate their
implementation. It would also be
the level where farmer input could be more effectively mobilized through a
single Farmer Advisory Committee (FAC).
The FAC would include 10-12 members representing all major stakeholders
within the block. The FAC would
help set block extension priorities and recommend resource allocation across
program areas. The block technology team would be responsible for
operationalizing the SREP in each block and moving toward a single
window extension system.
3.3.2.6
Upgrading and Restructuring the Extension Staff – Field Extension
Functionaries as Farm Advisors. The
DOA's extension field staff would be restructured and upgraded to create a
professional cadre of Farm Advisors. In the process, the village extension
worker (VEW) cadre would be incrementally phased out through reassignment and
normal attrition. Eventually, these
farm advisors would be in charge of all extension activities within the block
and they would all be required to meet a minimum educational requirement for
service entry i.e. B.Sc. (Agri.). In addition, the project would provide
in-service training in new planning, diagnostic and technical skills.
By the end of this project, this new cadre of extension professionals
should be able to identify and provide useful advice for most farmer problems
(i.e. become more demand-driven). First, they should be able to carry out a
systematic need assessment programme to prioritize farmer problems. Then, by
utilizing the strengthened cadre of research and extension specialists (SMSs)
within the district, they would be expected to organize and deliver a broader
range of extension and farmer training programmes. In addition, these upgraded
farm advisors would be expected to formulate and target location specific
recommendations, including systems-based technologies, to reflect the needs of
different socio-economic groups of farmers within their block or service area.
Besides, the SMS cadre would be expanded and strengthened in the district to
support the primary production and farming systems by supplying market related
information to the producers. To
facilitate collaboration between the line departments, district-level SMS
positions would remain within each development department, but their extension
activities would be coordinated under the ATMA framework.
3.3.2.7 Group Approach to Extension: The contact farmer approach to extension popularised by the T & V is
to be replaced by the group approach. Formation and mobilisation of Farmer
Interest Groups (FIGs), Farmers Co-operatives and Self-Help Groups will be
encouraged with the support of NGOs. Group extension will help to replace the
top down approach with bottom up approach in technology transfer, as FIGs will
first generate a demand for information, technology and management techniques.
The extension workers would then respond to the group demand. This would lead to
a farmer-extension worker participatory process with emphasis on problem solving
rather than disseminating routine messages. The group approach in extension
would also be in line with the Self-Help Groups of rural credit delivery, water
user associations, and co-operatives.
3.3.2.8
Strengthening research-extension-farmer linkages. There is a need for
close interaction between farmers, extensionists and production systems
researchers in diagnosing problems together and working out location specific
recommendations emphasizing participation education rather than prescription and
joint actions in the field. Accepted to be more knowledge intensive, these new
recommendations will require greater skills both to develop and to apply. There will be strengthening of
research-extension-farmer linkages not only at the state and SAU levels but also
at the district level; not only between the DOA and the SAUs, but between DOH,
DOS and DAH for horticulture, fodder, agro-forestry and silvi-pasture as well as
on-farm land and water management in a farming systems approach with due
coverage of agricultural marketing concerns. The research-extension interface at all levels from district
to national level will be supported
3.3.2.9
Promotion of Multi-Agency Extension Services.
Widening the range of extension delivery agencies for the resource poor
farmers and those residing in the hilly, tribal and remote areas, the public
system will have to remain as the chief extension mechanism with NGOs possibly
being able to play a significant role.
3.3.2.10 ICAR Role in Extension—Transfer of KVKs to DAC. The primary mandate
of ICAR is research. Its extension programmes should be limited to reinforcing
the research activities to make them more demand-driven and farmer centric. At
present the extension activities through 261 KVKs, are drawing away about 12% of
the ICAR Plan funds. This is likely
to increase further as the ICAR strives to establish one KVK in every district
by the end of the 9th Plan. Efforts were made towards the end of the
8th Plan to transfer the financial and administrative
responsibilities of KVKs to their respective state governments, which could not
materialize because of the severe resource constraints faced by the states.
Hence, Krishi Vigyan Kendras would continue to operate in pro-active mode,
retaining their allegiance with ICAR, for project implementation activities.
Apart from focusing on production related issues, ICAR research would adequately
address different components of marketing and make available need based packages
in consonance with the changed/changing agricultural marketing scenario. Links with KVKs will be strengthened at the district level
through institutions such as ATMAs.
3.3.3 Management
Reforms in Agricultural Extension
3.3.3.1
Central Government Support to State Governments for Extension Services on
their Undertaking Policy and Institutional Reforms. After the close of the
World Bank supported NAEP, central support to the state extension services dried
up, leaving them with the operation and maintenance of personnel and
infrastructure created under T&V. States have barely been able to pay the
salaries of extension personnel. Less than 10% of the budget is available for
operational expenses, which has practically immobilized the service with
scarcely any technology dissemination in the field. It is proposed to support
the state extension services provided policy reforms and institutional
restructuring is undertaken with demonstrated ability to be demand-driven,
farmer-accountable, sustainable & farming systems based with broad-based
integrated delivery. While funding for salaries of public functionaries will
continue to be the responsibility of the State Governments, funds for technology
dissemination and application (operation & management) would be shared
between States & Central Government.
3.3.3.2 Central Government Funds to be Pooled at ATMA or ATMA like Registered
Agencies at District Level. Funds from the central government together with
state share for all technology transfer and extension activities would be pooled
at these district level agencies and released for various activities according
to the Strategic Research and Extension Plan prepared for the district. At
present, annually about Rs. 200 crores worth of funds are released to the states
under 100 centrally sponsored schemes (crops, horticulture, inputs, soil &
water management) for the purpose of transfer
of technology. Wherever ATMAs have been established they should be the
conduits of these funds.
3.3.3.3
Central Government Assistance to State Agriculture Universities for
Expanded Role in Field Extension. On the pattern of the successful
scientist-farmer-extensionist model developed by the Punjab Agriculture
University, the Directorates of Extension of SAUs would be supported to play a
larger role in providing extension services in their service-areas.
3.3.3.4
Central Government Assistance to KVKs. Under the present arrangement
the ownership and mainstreaming of KVKs with
the state extension mechanisms has been weak. KVKs, set up as Centres for
location specific, adaptive research, if effectively organized to achieve their
primary objective of refinement and validation of local technologies could play
a strategic role in linking the research and extension systems particularly in
the area of farming systems based technologies. It is likely that State
Governments will be more willing to own and mainstream KVKs once their relevance
as district level technology refinement institutions integrated with the
extension machinery is demonstrated rather than as just another vocational
training organization, which they are largely perceived as at present and of
which there are several others at the district level.
3.3.3.5 Promotion of Community –Based
Private Extension Services. Group approach is the cornerstone of the
restructured extension mechanism. A major component of extension services will
be the mobilization of the community into farmers groups -- FIGs, FOs, and SHGs.
Farmers’ Organizations will be linked with Panchayats through existing
statutory institutional arrangements such as the Land Management Committees,
Development Committees etc. FOs will be supported directly through public funds
and will be involved in the planning, implementation, monitoring and feedback of
programmes. FOs at the village level would be federated at higher levels.
Representatives of FOs would be members of decision making bodies such as ATMAs,
Block level Farmer Advisory Committees, Watershed Associations. Ultimate aim is
for FOs to internalize extension services for its members and provide backward
(inputs, credit, technology) and forward linkages (post-harvest facilities,
markets, value addition) in a vertically integrated arrangement.
3.3.3.6 Promotion of NGOs based private
extension services. Strength of NGOs is in their ability to mobilize
communities into Farmers Organizations/ Farmer Interest Groups/ Watershed
Associations/Market Associations. As such NGOs complement the public extension
effort in several centrally sponsored programmes. Also extension services are contracted out and out-sourced to
NGOs at the Block level in some states. In such cases the NGOs substitute for
public extension. Public funds are used to support NGOs and are usually met from
the provision of administrative expenses built into the Project Costs. NGOs are
also supported directly by the central government in undertaking extension work.
Of the 261 KVKs in the country, 86 are operated by NGOs. A systematic training,
capacity building and technical backstopping mechanism, supported through public
funds is to be developed for NGOs involved in providing extension services.
3.3.3.7
Promotion of para-professional based private extension.
Para-extension workers normally supplement public extension in a relatively
cost-effective manner and overcome constraints of absentee public extension
functionaries (Gopals for AI
services, Mitra Kisan for agri-services such as soil testing etc.). Under the
new policy agenda para-extension workers at grassroot level will be supported
through publicly funded training and capacity building and payment of honorarium
in the early years. The honorarium will be routed through the Farmer
Organizations/ Farmer Groups serviced by the para-extension workers to ensure
accountability to the client group. Once the para-worker is able to demonstrate
his/ her usefulness to the client group the honorarium provided through public
funds will be phased out and the client group would take on the onus of paying
for the services of the para extension worker. The public extension machinery
will also assist para-workers in procuring loans from credit institutions for
equipment, mobility and linkages with SMSs in Line Departments and SAUs. There
will be an element of partial/ full cost recovery of services provided by para-workers
who must ultimately become economically viable units except in the case of
vulnerable clients where the State may continue the targeted subsidy.
3.3.3.8 Panchayati Raj Institutions and
extension services. After the 73rd Amendment most states are
conducting regular elections to the Panchayats. Some states have also delegated
suitable administrative and financial powers to the three tier Panchayati Raj
institutions. In these states the extension personnel are placed under the
administrative control of the panchayats, whereas for technical guidance they
remain under the control of their respective technical line departments. Since
the panchayat systems are evolving in different states and are currently in a
state of flux, the ATMA model at the district, the BTCs and FACs at the Block
and the FOs at the village level may be organized as conceived, and suitable
linkages be forged with the Panchayati Raj Institutions, e.g. the CEO of the
Zila Panchayat is the Vice-Chairman of ATMA, the Chairman of the FAC at the
Block is the elected chairman of the Development Committee of the Block
Panchayat and suitable linkages will be established between various FOs at the
village level and the Village Panchayats through the Land Management Committees,
Development Committees etc.
3.3.3.9
Competitive Agriculture Extension Grant Fund. Similar to the
Competitive Agriculture Research Grant Fund set up in ICAR and several state
governments, wherein both public & private sector research institutions
compete for funds to address specific research problems,
it is proposed to set up a
Competitive Agriculture Extension Grant Fund. Resources under this fund could be
accessed through a competitive bidding process. Contracting out extension
services to private sector, community-based organizations or NGOs in selected
geographical areas (e.g.. a village, cluster of villages, Block) would be done
through a transparent, laid out procedure under this Fund. This would also imply
a strict monitoring and evaluation process.
3.3.3.10 Linkage of performance with funding for public sector. In a manner
similar to the private extension agencies who must compete with one another to
access funds and whose subsequent eligibility to compete for funds will depend
upon their performance as indicated by an independent impact evaluation, it is
proposed that on a pilot basis Public extension agencies also be made to compete
with private extension agencies for operational funds under Competitive
Agriculture Extension Grant Fund (CAEGF).
3.3.3.11 Contracting out extension support services. Wherever possible
extension services in whole or in part could be contracted out for greater cost
effectiveness. This applies, in addition, to administrative services such as
security, mobility, computer and secretarial services, participatory planning to
NGOs (being done in watershed management), staff training to a University/
Institute, monitoring to a Farmer Organizations/ IIM/ Other Institutions.
3.3.4
Improving Research-Extension Linkages
3.3.4.1
Promotion of direct interface between farmers and scientists. The
direct interface between scientists and farmers is the most ideal and should be
undertaken wherever possible. It is an oft- repeated refrain that farmers learn
best from scientists or other successful farmers. Moreover, transmission losses
are minimized in the direct interface. However, there are relatively high costs
attached to this direct mode of technology transfer and the outreach of
scientists is limited. Punjab Agriculture University has achieved significant
success through this system. It must be noted however, that Punjab is a small
state geographically and what is applicable to Punjab may not be possible in
large states such as Uttar Pradesh, Madhya Pradesh and Maharashtra.
3.3.4.2 Activating Existing Interface Mechanisms. Regional Committees of the
ICAR, Zonal interfaces initiated by DAC, national level pre-kharif and pre-rabi
DAC-ICAR interface, state level bi-annual meetings between line departments and
SAUs are all formally instituted mechanisms for improving research-extension
linkages. Several of these mechanisms have fallen into disuse or are conducted
in a perfunctory manner. As a result the desired results are not being achieved.
These will be activated.
3.3.4.3 Research priority setting based on SREP.
Micro-level extension strategies reflected in the Strategic Research and
Extension Plans (SREPs) based on PRA and developed jointly by the district
technology teams including the marketing department officials and scientists of
the KVKs/ ZRS or SAUs should be formally feedback into the research systems
through a research priority setting mechanism in the ICAR.
3.3.5 Capacity Building of Extension Functionaries
3.3.5.1 Formulation of HRD Policy by States. Central Government support for HRD in Agricultural Extension
would be available to the states only after the formulation and adoption of a
HRD Policy and Action Plan through a systematic skill-gap analysis (Such a
policy would incorporate compulsory training and skill upgradation of all
extension functionaries). It would also build in an effective system of rewards
and incentives for public extension functionaries.
3.3.5.2 Formulation
of Training Plan for Extension functionaries. A long-term training plan
should be developed by each state based on a thorough skill gap analysis. A
massive campaign will need to be launched for skill upgradation and capacity
building of extension functionaries using resources of all training institutes.
The training be divided into Foundation
Courses comprising skill up gradation in (i) need assessment techniques
including the role of participatory rural appraisal (ii) group formation (iii)
development of entrepreneurial skills for agri-business
(iv) agri-business management (v) WTO and its implications (vi) marketing
of agricultural produce (vii) post harvest management (viii) conflict resolution
and negotiations between different interest groups (ix) management of common
property resources (x) use of different type of media (xi) communication (xii)
project preparation (xiii) data collection, analysis and documentation.
Foundation courses should be conducted jointly with scientists of SAUs. Professional
Courses would be conducted at SAUs and Centres of Excellence at the ICAR
Institutes in various subject matter disciplines. National and state level
agriculture education institutions will need reorientation keeping in view
changing requirements.
3.3.5.3 One Time Catch-up Grant for Training Infrastructure. One-shot up-gradation of physical
infrastructure of training institutes/ Centres be considered to revive the
training institutes to an acceptable level. Funding for this purpose to be made
jointly by the central and State governments.
3.3.5.4 Upgrading State Level Extension Management Training Institutions. Central government would support State Governments to upgrade
and restructure their apex state level training institutions to respond to the
changing requirements of extension, training and communication management; these
upgraded state level apex institutions could have institutional links with
MANAGE/NIAM and function as the state arms of the National level Institute.
Structural changes in the form of providing greater autonomy to these State
Agricultural Management Extension Training Institutes (SAMETIs) would be a
pre-condition of support from GOI. Use of mass media communication techniques
will be developed to communicate messages about available technology.
Appropriate curricula will be developed for training of field staff, with major
focus on marketing related issues.
3.3.5.5 Strengthening Role of MANAGE. The National Institute of Agricultural
Extension Management (MANAGE)
will be strengthened to enable it to assist the States in developing their HRD
capacities.
3.3.5.6 Developing professionalism in cost effective manner. Training
Institutes/ Centres may focus on developing core competency; other services may
be out-sourced or contracted. Feedback from participants must be used to
evaluate performance of faculty
3.3.5.7 Training Institutes and SAUs to train private extension functionaries.
Facilities of public training institutions and SAUs would be available to NGOs
and private extension agents.
3.3.5.8 Networking among all state level institutes. All national and state
level training institutes will be networked to State headquarters, SAUs and
MANAGE. The network will also include private institutions with
expertise in different fields.
3.3.6.1 Involving farmers in setting
extension agenda. Farmers’ representation as major stakeholders will be
ensured in all decision -making bodies of public and private extension services.
Farmer will be involved in the planning and implementation of extension
programmes through formal institutional mechanisms such as ATMAs, FACs etc.
3.3.6.2 Implementation of programmes through Farmers’ User Groups. By ensuring that all programmes in the field are planned and implemented through farmer user groups, such as Watershed Associations, fruit/ vegetable growers cooperatives/ societies, Agricultural Produce Marketing Societies/ Cooperatives etc. farmers would be able to influence both administrative and financial decisions.
3.3.6.3 Contracting arrangements between governments, extension services and
farmers, whereby the farmers could play the role of beneficiaries, provider or
co-financier of extension services.
3.3.6.4 Acquisition of Skills by
Farmers. Training and
acquisition of skills by farmers is a central part of the technology transfer
system because of the new practices involved in production. Greater focus will
be provided for (i) assessing
farmers' needs and skills; (ii) distinguishing different dimensions of training
such as awareness, knowledge, skills and reinforcement, and using appropriate
channels and methods for each; (iii) different kinds of technologies and advice
required by different categories
of male and female farmers, the transfer mechanism (e.g. face-to-face, mass
media, different types of groups) they prefer during different phases of
awareness, trial and adoption of new skills and technologies (iv) use of information technology for improving the quality
and accelerating the transfer and exchange of information; (iv) organising
training programmes on system based and sustainable technologies such as
Integrated Pest Management (IPM) and Integrated Plant Nutrient management (IPNM);
(v) organizing training and taking initiatives for capacity building of farmers
towards agricultural marketing. Capacity building, skill up gradation/training
of farmers would be largely conducted through farmers’ field schools with an
active participation of scientists and extension personnel.
3.3.7
Mainstreaming Women in Agriculture
3.3.7.1
Mainstreaming women in agriculture. Gender concerns need to be
mainstreamed in the agricultural extension process. Public
extension systems, which must disseminate new technology and information, are
still largely male dominated. Hence the necessity to target women is to ensure
that they receive information relevant to their work, particularly, with
reference to crops and livestock.
3.3.7.2 Improving access to extension and training: Women farmers usually
have been neglected in extension efforts. Gender inequality had so far not been
challenged by the agricultural extension system in the past.
However, with the changing scenario, the need for innovating changes in
extension approaches has assumed centre-stage. Under these innovations efforts
will need to be made both by the central and state governments to improve
extension services to reach farm women through (i) extension policy
reorientation that explicitly recognizes farm women as agricultural extension
clientele; (ii) training of men and women extension staff on women’s role in
agriculture and rural development and how agricultural extension work could be
organized and conducted to meet women’s needs in agriculture and rural
development activities; (iii) training of women on decision-making in the
context of farm and home management (iv) training of women farmers on
agricultural marketing, particularly with respect to post-harvest processing, on
farm value addition and market requirements/demand.
3.3.7.3 Redesign of extension services to reach women farmers. Extension
services are being redesigned to focus on women through (i) appropriate
training/ sensitization of extension personnel towards the role and contribution
of women in the total agriculture system; (ii) increasing the proportion of
trained female extension workers to gradually ensure that at least one-third of
all extension workers are women (iii) sensitising
male extension workers to the needs, approaches and perspectives of women
through appropriate training and orientation programmes thereby dispelling the
notion that only women can address extension needs of farm women
(iv) improving communication between women, researchers, marketing agencies and
extension workers required for the development of technology suitable for
women; (v) developing
appropriate extension methodologies that recognize the multi-dimensional role of
women and the socio-cultural barriers, in which women farmers operate in a rural
society; (vi) establishing Head of
the Farming family as the target group, for extension services and assuming that
the information will automatically trickle down to women farmers.
3.3.7.4 Expanding the sphere of women extension workers. The number of female
agricultural extension workers would be increased through (i)
re-examination of all service cadre rules for hidden gender biases
(ii) improvement of female
attendance at agricultural institutes and school (iii) building incentives such as scholarships and stipends for more
women to take up under-graduate and post graduate courses in the agricultural
and allied sciences (iv) redesigning of agricultural training curricula to
include women’s concerns: (v) ensuring
that women are adequately represented in all training programmes whether
domestic or overseas (vi)
redesigning of training facilities to make them suitable for large numbers of
female students and trainees; (vii) inclusion in the teaching curricula for
extension workers, greater analysis and extension methods that take into account
women’s time, mobility and cultural situation; and (viii) exploring the
specific role of farm women in the marketing of agricultural produce.
3.3.8
Use of Information Technology.
3.3.8. Information Technology revolution is unfolding, and has very high
visibility. However, its benefits have remained confined primarily to the urban
areas. Rural communities have not been able to gain to the same extent from IT.
As a means of agricultural technology transfer to farmers, information
technology, has had a limited impact. Even
the vast potential of the broadcasting network has been tapped only minimally
for extension.
3.3.8.2
Increasing Use of Information Technologies. Harnessing Information
Technology for agricultural extension will receive high priority in the new
policy agenda. Extensive use of modern information technology will be promoted
for communication between researchers, extension workers and their farmer
clients to transfer technologies and information more cost effectively. Information technology should be made available,
particularly, to those with specific inquiries to guide them in adopting the
more knowledge intensive forms of agriculture, which will expand in future.
3.3.8.3
IT Application in Agriculture Marketing.
Agriculture produce marketing requires connectivity between the market
and exporters/ growers/ traders, industry consumers, through wide area network
of national and international linkages in order to provide day-to-day
information with regard to commodity arrivals and prevailing rates etc. to
provide links for on-line International market information; to provide export
related documentation, to inform about the latest research in agricultural
marketing, packaging, storage related information and to provide connectivity
with lead international and national market organizations.
3.3.8.4 Wider Use of Electronic Mass Media for Agricultural
Extension. Radio and TV have vastly increased their reach, as also
reception facilities. “Local” radio and new FM transmitters open up
possibilities of area- specific broadcasts. In communicating with an audience
with low literacy skills, an audio-visual medium like TV has advantages. Today
Doordarshan covers the entire population. Much wider and creative use of the
mass media – All India Radio, private FM, Doordarshan, private cable network
will be promoted for more rapid and effective dissemination of general
information and advice to farming communities. This will include market
information; market led production planning, on farm and post harvest
management/value addition, e-contracting, market networks, market intelligence
and wider application of World Wide Web. Face to face contacts should follow and
back up these methods of information dissemination, not precede or substitute
for them. Central government will support states in their effort to make fuller
use of electronic media. Central government would also consider supporting an
exclusive Agriculture Channel on Television.
3.3.8.5
Farmer Participation in IT Programmes. In developing any system of IT
for agriculture technology transfer; the farmer is to be kept centre-stage.
She/he is not to be treated as a passive recipient but rather as a player, a
generator and user of knowledge. The upgradation of his/her skills and knowledge
is therefore a crucial part of the process. The farmer will be an effective
participant in the process.
3.3.8.6
Support to States for Information Technology.
Increased use of information technology at State/ district and block
levels would be promoted. This would include electronic access, through NICNET,
to technical and administrative information; [e.g. electronic mail (EM) access
to ICAR and SAU researchers, plus state and national administrative offices, and
electronic access to ARIS system databases and, eventually, to the World Wide
Web]. Under the NATP all the Block level Farm Advisory Information Centres in 28
project districts would be electronically linked to district, state and national
institutions. Central Government will support States in the use of electronic
linkages and computerization so that marketing, research, extension and farming
communities are linked to each other, and into local, national and global
networks. The objective is to link all 5200 Blocks to the state and national
network and the Internet in a phased manner.
3.3.8.7 Private Information Shops/ Kiosks. The
ultimate aim is to promote private Information shops/ kiosks franchised out to
private sector especially unemployed rural educated youth, in the manner of
PCOs/ STD shops. Private sector will be encouraged to establish information
shops at Block/ Mandal/ Village level. A major programme for development of
software will need to be mounted so that Information Shops could have access to
suitable material. Electronic connectivity and access to e-mail would put the
franchisees in contact with district KVKs, Line Departments, markets and other
sources of information. Such information could be dispensed to farmers, farmers
groups on payment. Credit facilities for purchase of equipment for setting up
such Information Shops would be permissible under the micro-credit programme for
agriculture and allied activities.
3.3.8.8 Capacity Building for use of IT. Application of IT is constrained by
lack of or inadequacy of complementary inputs (equipment, power, etc),
appropriate organisational and institutional structures, information management
and skills development. A major training programme for developing capacity for
IT usage will be promoted. Training
Institutes will run suitable courses for the purpose.
3.3.9 Financial Sustainability & Resource Mobilization
3.3.9.1 Publicly
funded extension will continue to play a predominant role in technology
dissemination firstly because the large numbers of small disadvantaged farmers
may not have access to or be able to afford any other kind, and secondly,
because much of the new technology will not be commercially marketable for
instance watershed management, land capability assessment and land use planning,
breaking of yield ceilings sustainable management of natural resources and
socio- economic research. But pressures on government expenditure mean that
public funds will have to be more carefully targeted and more efficiently used.
3.3.9.2 Cost-cutting mechanisms for
extension services. Cost
effectiveness may be improved by relying on fewer but better qualified (graduate
or post‑graduate) field advisers who interact directly with researchers
for subject matter advice and then multiply their impact in the field by working
with farmer groups rather than individual contact farmers. Cost cutting
mechanisms, including the exploitation of mass media, encouragement of NGO and
private sector involvement in extension, or needs-based coverage
3.3.9.3 Efficient use of available resources. Optimum fund utilization will
be achieved with better matching the farmers
needs with extension delivery, a stronger focus on the economics of
farming, and the use of participatory methods to assess needs, create commitment
to action, and monitor impact.
3.3.9.4 Privatization of agro-services.
An environment in which private
investment in technology generation and transfer is more attractive will be
created. Product diversification
both horizontal and vertical shall be promoted to not only improve profitability
sustainability and more efficient use of production resources but also to
encourage greater involvement of the private sector.
Where opportunities exist to contract out publicly‑funded services,
or to transfer costs to the corporate sector or to users themselves, these
opportunities should be exploited‑for instance for diversification into
higher‑value or export crops, or to develop new commercial inputs or
machines. Privatization of selected “private goods” and agro services
wherever a competitive market exists, such as AI services, soil testing,
fertilizer advice, farm improvement plans or breeding plans would be undertaken.
Wherever feasible contract farming through the involvement of private sector
would be taken up, particularly, in the area of high value/ export oriented
agriculture.
3.3.9.5
Towards a realistic cost recovery of agro-services. Wherever farmers have the capacity to pay for public services, which
are in the nature of private goods, realistic cost of such services should be
recovered. However, provision is made for targeted subsidies to protect the
vulnerable class of users.
3.3.9.6 Co-financing of public extension.
Co-financing of public extension services by farmers and farmers’ associations
to reduce pressure on public finances and to improve the accountability and
responsiveness of extension to farmers.
3.3.9.7 Initiating
new financial systems. Modification
in rules and regulations and innovations in financial institutions will also be
required to allow for arrangements such as "revolving funds" for
government farms, nurseries, etc. While budgetary support to these units may
continue to meet pay and allowances of government staff, the funds for recurring
expenditure and operational costs could be generated by these units from the
commercial activities undertaken by them. All efforts would be made to develop
credit linkages of farmers and farmers groups with credit institutions.
3.3.10 Changing role of Government
3.3.10.1
Role of State in Effective
Regulation & Enforcement. As a
multi-agency extension regime proliferates, the responsibility of the State for
effective enforcement of legislation, which ensures quality control of inputs
such as seed, pesticides, fertilizers etc. will increase.
State’s role as arbitrator of conflicts between various private sector
extension agents will also increase and systems to address grievances will need
to be developed. This role will increase as the number of private extension
agencies grows. Guidelines for
private agencies would be required. However,
in the emerging pluralistic scenario the role of public extension would need to
be redefined from one of solely a provider of services to become increasingly an
appropriate mix of provider, coordination, facilitator and regulator.
The large section of small and marginal farmers and landless labourers as
well as remote and backward regions would continue to need the services of the
public extension functionaries, as they are not likely to be serviced by a
competitive private sector in the near future.
Public Extension’s role would increase in arbitration of conflicts,
assuring accountability of all service providers to the farmers and ensure
transparency through provision of information.
The overall environment of private provision of extension services
deserves to be encouraged through policy reforms and institutional changes so
that rural people’s needs serviced more efficiently.
3.3.10.2 Creating an Enabling
Environment. Generally, this implies appropriate legislation, rules and regulations,
and application of the rule of law. In
particular, it implies that private contracts and property are protected and a
judiciary exists to enforce contracts without partiality and undue delay.
Where many individual smallholders are concerned a legal course of action
may, however, not be practical or politically expedient for handling conflicts
and disputes. Government can
instead support institutions like an independent arbiter, an ombudsman, or a
small farmer reference service that would certify bona fide borrowers or
agricultural producers. Governments
can also set minimum standards and norms for commodities such as food,
pesticides, and packaging materials when it is in the interest of public health.
To protect the weaker of the contracting parties, governments can propose
minimum standard contract clauses and guidelines for small farmer/ agribusiness
transactions. It is essential that
such proposals be seen as recommendations, not prescriptions.
An important condition for lasting farmer-agribusiness linkages is
security of tenure. Activities
supported by international donors in many countries include land titling, formal
transfer of public land to de facto users, and outright land reform.
3.3.10.3
Enhancing Competition. The enhancement of competition is another government contribution to
improving the institutional environment. It
involves all measures to ensure open, fair and transparent competition and to
facilitate entry of newcomers. It may include breaking up of monopolies and cartels,
ensuring minimum professional standards of business conduct, and resisting
demands for non-technical obstacles to official licensing by rent-seeking
lobbies. A lack of financial means
is frequently the reason that prevents newcomers from establishing new
businesses. Governments can assist
young entrepreneurs to access credit and venture capital by providing technical
assistance to prepare business plans, conduct market surveys and hire help to
resolve special engineering or legal problems and through this to improve
confidence of funding sources in new ventures.
Part of creating an enabling environment would also be to address the
downside of privatization and liberalization.
This might include the provision of safety nets and skills for
alternative livelihood to those who are unable to survive the competition in
deregulated markets.
3.3.10.4 Strengthening Farmers’
Associations. Government services can help
identify existing associations or cooperatives of farmers and support them to
develop their organization. The aim
must be to assist the groups to define their objectives, such as savings
mobilization or specific post-harvest operations, to ensure group coherence and
continuity, and to assist them with setting up group structures and
organization. Over time such groups
can establish a track record of organizational maturity that will allow,
possibly after joining with other groups for economies of scale, to engage in
their own business activities and to gain access to formal credit.
Government extension services and NGO staff need to receive suitable
training to act as group facilitators. Training
would be centred on group dynamics, record keeping and accountancy, financial
management of savings and credit, identification of group business opportunities
and producing business plans, and on imparting technical skills to undertake new
ventures. Support to farmers’
organizations is perhaps the main single input that governments can provide for
the promotion of farmer integration with agribusiness.
3.3.10.5 Strengthening Physical
Infrastructure. The government’s role would increasingly be in the area of
physical infrastructure provision, including communications and utilities,
farm-to-market roads, and rural and urban markets.
Promotion of private sector would be through making available sites with
road and electricity connections to attract enterprises that may set up
marketing or processing facilities as pert of an industrial estate.
Rural or farm-to-market roads also facilitate linkages between farmers
and private service providers. Similarly
development of wholesale market yards is also supported by governments at given
stages of marketing development. At
more advanced stages such facilities tend to lose their functions, as
alternative forms of marketing develop for a variety of agricultural products
that rely on direct producer/ agribusiness/ consumer linkages and by-pass
traditional markets.
3.3.10.6 Improving Information. Another way of leveling the
playing field for private sector is the improvement of information.
Information gathering and analysis is costly.
Compared to commercial business, farmers are at a disadvantage on
knowledge about prices, volumes, qualities, alternative marketing channels and
other feature governing market transactions. Government can improve the
communications flow and the quality of information to farmers through training
workshops and publications and by this improve transparency and facilitate
transactions. Government can also sponsor market-matching exercises, that
is, sponsor meetings and workshops involving farmers and agribusiness
enterprises to improve mutual understanding of constraints and requirements, and
promote concrete business deals.
4.1 Through their sheer numbers and outreach the public extension system
would continue to play a prominent role in technology dissemination. The large
section of small and marginal farmers and landless labourers would need to be
serviced by the public extension systems. The other actors involved in the
extension/ transfer of technologies such as NGOs, Farmers Organizations, Private
Sector (both corporate & informal), para-workers etc. would actively
complement/ supplement the efforts of the public extension agency and wherever
possible replace it. Extension mechanisms will have to be driven by farmers'
needs, be location specific and address diversification demands.
Technologies required to address total farming systems are knowledge
intensive. Public extension system will need to be redefined with focus on
knowledge-based technologies to upgrade and improve the skills of the farmers.
4.2 As agricultural extension transforms itself into a more diversified
farming systems approach from its present simplistic accent on yield enhancement
by increasing some limited inputs, farmers will be required to adopt a wider
range of inputs and practices and develop skills in their more efficient use.
The task of extension will become more challenging in the wake of post WTO era,
which demands a system of market led extension with specific focus on
diversification, post harvest management and export orientation. This will
present a more complex role, but simultaneously requiring a flexible approach
allowing specific information to be customized for different farmer-groups. A
strategy of institutional innovations in extension will be evolved which
optimizes the strengths of the public-private sectors to service the needs of
the farming community.