stdClass Object ( [id] => 7955 [paper_index] => EW201710-01-002102 [title] => CRISIS IN AGRICULTURE-A STUDY OF SMALL FARMERS IN ANDHRA PRADESH [description] =>
  1. Planning Commission , Government of India, New Delhi,  2008 Page No. 5
  2. Ministry of Agriculture, Annual Report 2015-16 Department of Agriculture, Cooperation and Farmers Welfare, Page No 2
  3. Preface to the proceedings of the International Seminar on “Comparative Experience of Agricultural Development in Developing Countries of Asia and South East since the Second World War” by ML Dhanwala,Indian Society of Agricultural Economics, 1972
  4. Indian Agriculture: Current Scenario and Future Challenges , Chapter 6, Page No.110
  5. Government of India, Planning Commission and VIII Five year plan  (1992-97) Vol.1 , page 33
  6. Department of Economic Analysis and Research NABARD  Rural Pulse, Mumbai, Issuer 1, Jan-Feb 2014, Page no.1
  7. NSS 59th Round on “ The Situation Assessment Survey of Farmers-2003                  
  8. A Report of Lok Neethi: On State of Indian Farmers. A report – CSDS , New Delhi

Journals:

  1. Economic and Political Weekly
  2. Journal of Rural Development      
  3. Political Economy Journal of India          
[author] => Prof. C.Narasimha Rao [googlescholar] => https://scholar.google.co.in/citations?user=KeqZGcIAAAAJ&hl=en [doi] => [year] => 2018 [month] => August [volume] => 6 [issue] => 8 [file] => eprapub/EW201710-01-002102.pdf [abstract] =>

There is scholarly consensus that colonialism was a phenomenon that frustrated all possibilities of growth of the Indian economy. Over the fifty years that preceded independence in 1947, food grain output in India grew at a meagre 0.1 per cent per annum (Blyn, 1966). In the period following independence, agricultural growth in India began to pick up. Between 1949-50 and 1964-65, the index of agricultural production (IAP) grew by 3.1 per cent per annum, driven by high growth rates in both food grain and non-food grain production. The growth rate of IAP, however, fell to 2.3 per cent in the period between 1967-68 and 1980-81. There was a recovery in the growth rate of IAP in the period between 1981-82 and 1991-92, with the IAP growing at 3.4 per cent. In the final period between 1992-93 and 2005-06, the growth rate of IAP fell to a meagre 1.2 per cent. Significantly, for the first time after independence, the rate of growth of IAP fell behind the rate of growth of population in the last period. The above periodisation remains valid when we consider the GVO data from CSO also.

KEYWORDS: Indian economy, cropping intensity, irrigation system, food insecurity.

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