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Living off the land

Living off the land

There was a time when agriculture was the booming sector on which the livelihood of rural people depended. Returns were promising and increasing back then. 

In recent years, however, returns from this sector have been diminishing alarmingly despite encroachment upon forests,  pastures and marginal parcels for cultivation. Unable to make a living by relying solely on the farms, rural people have begun looking for alternatives. 

With youths leaving the villages in droves for abroad, farmlands have fallen fallow, mainly in hilly areas. Instead of agriculture, remittance is fast becoming the source of  livelihood for rural people.

Food imports have gone up in recent years, thanks to an increase in uncultivated land and increased flow of remittance resulting from a growing exodus of village youths. 

This article seeks to examine the factors turning agriculture into an unattractive sector and triggering youth exodus, and prescribes ways to revive the sector. 

The farmer needs a number of things to maximize returns from agriculture in this day and age. A large parcel of land, access to bank credit, irrigation facilities, a reliable supply of fertilizers as well as electricity and an easy access to the market are some of the prerequisites. 

But these things are hard to get in our country. Farmlands are shrinking, thanks to ownership transfer from one heir to another. Even these parcels are located in remote parts where it is quite difficult to apply modern methods of cultivation for improving both production and productivity.

With the aim of helping small farmers improve farm production and productivity, the government as well as banks have launched various microfinance schemes/programs. 

But even this intervention has failed to make meaningful changes in the farmers’ lives. First and foremost, these programs/schemes have failed to bring back the farmer into farming. What’s more, most of the beneficiaries have not been able to pay interest, leave alone the principal. Contrary to Nepal’s experience, Bangladesh has been implementing a similar program/scheme with great success. 

The way out

The need of the hour is to turn farmlands lying fallow into cultivable land and make Nepal a food-sufficient country by thinking albeit differently. 

The government in particular needs to take a number of steps, to begin with. 

First of all, it needs to go for community farming. 

How to bring parcels of land lying fallow under community farming? What should be the basis for cost and benefit sharing? 

Leasing could be one of the options. A group of persons, including entrepreneurs, can lease parcels belonging to a large number of land-holders by paying them a certain amount annually. Such groups can maximize both production and productivity in those swathes by employing modern methods of farming. This will enable food-insecure communities living close by to buy locally-grown foodstuffs at reasonable rates apart from giving sustainable agricultural practices a great boost. Large farms also mean jobs for members of local communities. All in all, such farms can bring great dividends to rural Nepal. 

However, the government has to have political will to opt for community farming. First and foremost, it needs a huge budget to lease parcels of land before leasing it out to large-scale growers. Also, the government needs to invest in the development of necessary infrastructure and provide legal, technical and financial support to the growers. 

At a time when farmlands are shrinking, the government needs to move ahead with a sense of urgency if it is serious about averting a grave food crisis. 

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