Paragraph, Essay and Speech on “Causes of Low Productivity in Indian Agriculture” Paragraph for Class 9, Class 10, Class 12 Class and Graduate Exams.

Causes of Low Productivity in Indian Agriculture

Introduction

The problem of low agricultural productivity in India is a very complex problem and it cannot be attribute to any single cause. The factors that and causes of  low agricultural production in India now be discussed under the following broad heads:

  1. Natural and general factors

Pressure of population on land: The country’s population is much greater than its share in the land of the world. Not only this, the ratio of cultivable land to total land is also comparatively low. There is, therefore, greater pressure of population on land. Increasing pressure of population on land is partly responsible for the sub division and fragmentation of holdings. Productivity on small uneconomic holdings is low.

Nature of soil: The country has varied soil conditions from one part of the country to the other. Further the continuous cropping without replacement of lost fertility leads to deterioration of the conditions of the soil.

Read More  Essay, Paragraph, Speech on “The Dentist will see you now” Essay for Class 9, Class 10, Class 12 Class and Graduate Exams.

Natural factors: Agriculture in India is dominated by nature, especially by rainfall. It is said to be a gamble in monsoon. The rains may be insufficient or unevenly distributed, they are uncertain and sometimes we have too much of rain resulting in floods, causing wide-spread damage and destruction: There may be other natural calamities be falling on Indian agriculture such as hail storm, frost or attack by insects. These seriously handicap the Indian farmer in stepping up agricultural output.

Subsistence farming: A large majority of farmers keep to farming for raising food grains for thier subsistence and therefore they do not produce for selling in the market. The productivity of such farms is bound to be low on account of the cropping pattern of the low prospects for the agricultural improvement.

  1. Techno-economic factors

Outdated agricultural techniques: Most of the Indian farmers continue to use outdated agricultural techniques. Wooden ploughs and bullocks are still used by a majority of farmers. Use of fertilizer and new high-yielding verity (H.Y.V) of seeds is also extremely limited. In summary, Indian agriculture is traditional, therefore, productivity is low.

Read More  Paragraph, Essay and Speech on “Social Changes in India” Paragraph for Class 9, Class 10, Class 12 Class and Graduate Exams.

Lack of irrigation facilities: Despite considerable efforts in bringing more area under irrigation, only 1/3rd of the total cultivated area is provided with irrigation facilities. Obviously, the rest of the area has to depend on rainfall. Even in the case of irrigated area optimum use of water is not made on account of non-availability of suitable water channel sprinklers.

Use of manures: We are aware that there is considerable wastage of organic manures in the form of farmyard manures in rural areas and urban waste in cities and town which could be fruitfully utilized for production of energy and increasing fertility.

Back of adequate finance: Financial facilities are utterly inadequate so that the farmer has to depend on the village money lender who charges exorbitant rates. More over the institutional credit covered barely 6.4% of it. In such a state productivity cannot be significant.

Read More  Paragraph, Essay and Speech on “ Mughal Emperor Jahangir (Son of Akbar)” Paragraph for Class 9, Class 10, Class 12 Class and Graduate Exams.

Absence of productive investment: Investment is jewellery, gold. etc., seem to be more attractive than investment in, land and other productive purposes. In the absence of productive investment, production cannot expand.

Neglect of agricultural research: Expenditure on agricultural research is very small and not development oriented.

In recent years the agricultural problem has become much more serious and intense as the population reached to over 1.2 billion. India requires a minimum growth rate of 4% in food grains and 6% in non-food crops. But the rate of growth in agriculture till date is not satisfactory enough. This is the challenge to the Indian agriculture which will have to be boldly tackled.

Leave a Reply

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

ozototo mbah sukro bandar bola jamur4d bandar bola slot gacor 777 slot777 slot mpo cariwd88 cariwd88 samson88 samson88 samson88 samson88 mbahsukro mbahsukro slot mpo kingbokep jenongplay mafiatoto samson88 cariwd88 dausbet dausbet mainzeus cagurbet samson88 mainzeus mainzeus dausbet slot777 cagurbet slot777 slot mpo dausbet slot777 dausbet samson88 samson88 samson88 samson88 cagurbet slot777 slot gacor hari ini samson88 Slot777 slot mpo https://gasindustri.co.id/ https://swiss-test.swisswatches-magazine.de/ slot88 https://clinicabmp.com/ slot gacor dausbet https://webs.stikesabi.ac.id/lib/ kno89 cagurbet cagurbet cagurbet samson88 cagurbet apk slot macan238 slot thailand mainzeus https://www.chabad.com/videos/ cagurbet slot2d slot2d mpo slot samson88 scatter hitam slot thailand slot777 slot thailand scatter hitam https://alfaisalyfc.net/lib/ mainzeus slot88 slot777 jamur4d jamur4d slot2d slot2d slot2d https://xn----8sbkhsknde.xn--p1ai/lib/ cagurbet cagurbet slot777 livetotobet livetotobet https://summerschool.sristi.org/lib/ dausbet slot2d slot2d samson88 samson88 livetotobet livetotobet livetotobet livetotobet livetotobet livetotobet livetotobet livetotobet dausbet cagurbet cagurbet bintang4d livetotobet livetotobet cagurbet