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Haryana, Haryana, India India J.C. Katyal J.C. Katyal Vice Chancellor Vice Chancellor

CCS Haryana Agricultural University

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GREETINGS. J.C. Katyal Vice Chancellor. CCS Haryana Agricultural University. Haryana, India. South Asia (SA) Region. As per the South Asian Association for Regional Cooperation (SAARC), SA comprises of seven countries – India, Pakistan, Bangla Desh, Sri Lanka, Nepal, Bhutan and Maldives - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: CCS Haryana Agricultural University

Haryana, IndiaHaryana, India

J.C. KatyalJ.C. KatyalVice ChancellorVice Chancellor

Page 2: CCS Haryana Agricultural University

South Asia (SA) Region• As per the South Asian Association for

Regional Cooperation (SAARC), SA comprises of seven countries – India, Pakistan, Bangla Desh, Sri Lanka, Nepal, Bhutan and Maldives

• Notwithstanding this political alliance- led delineation, statistics on the state of agriculture and agriculture dependent population, largely include India, Pakistan, Bangladesh, Sri Lanka and Nepal to designate South Asian Region.

Page 3: CCS Haryana Agricultural University

Population and Area

World – Population : 6.6 billionSA – Population : 1.5 billion

World – Area : 13 billion haSouth Asia – Area : 449 million ha Thus, South Asia has to feed 23% of the

world population from merely 3.6% of the world area

Page 4: CCS Haryana Agricultural University

South Asia - Agriculture• SA - a home to the most ancient agriculture based

civilizations• One of the most resource rich regions, particularly

bio-diversity• Region as a whole has high incidence of natural

disasters• SA is characterized by high levels of food production;

happening of Green Revolution • Emerging as a growing centre for manufacturing, trade

and services• Despite successes, SA suffers from high density of

population, environmentally stressed agriculture, high levels of rural poverty, gender inequality and social exclusion, natural resources degradation, depletion of land and water and a growing rural urban divide

Page 5: CCS Haryana Agricultural University

South Asia - Farmers• Farmers living in different realities and facing different

futures: small and marginal farmers dominate, holding size shrinking, subsistence farming, high rate of unemployment, supplement incomes by combining crops and livestock

• Share of agriculture dependent population continues to be high

• Out-migration has to some extent relieved economic pressure; left out population represented by infirm and females who have limited capacity and capability to invest in restorative management and soil and water conservation, all leading to accelerated damage of natural resources

• Awareness and interest are increasing in technologies and policies on sustainable agricultural practices

Page 6: CCS Haryana Agricultural University

S A- New Agriculture• Diversification and value addition are seen as tools of

raising incomes, nutrition and sustainable growth of agriculture, which at present is stagnating or declining

• A right mix of pro-farmer and pro-nature technologies, their transfer and enabling environment (education/training, inputs, infrastructure) and policies (prices and market links) are necessary elements of breaking the barriers of stagnation and or decline in agricultural productivity, profitability and sustainability of farming

• Education and training for know how and skill building come as the front ranking strategy for relieving population pressure

• Voice for lessening gender inequalities and mainstreaming is focus of development discussions

Page 7: CCS Haryana Agricultural University

Productivity and profitability – women hit hardest

• Falling agricultural productivity growth rates, rising costs, declining profits, high debt, spurious seeds and pesticides, cheap imported agricultural produce……all cause severe distress and need urgent attention

• An estimated 27% Indian farmers did not like farming because it was not profitable. In all, 40%, if given a choice, prefer to quit farming (NSSO Report # 496)

• Women lives are dependent on and intimately affected by the present state, particularly of male farmers and falling profitability of farming. If a farmer commits suicide due to mounting debt and falling profitability, the widow in fact becomes a living corpse

Page 8: CCS Haryana Agricultural University

www.worldmapper.org

Page 9: CCS Haryana Agricultural University

Sectoral distribution of WWF (%) (HDSA, 1997 and 2000)

Country Agri. Industry Services WWF

India 62 11 27 27Pakistan 47 20 33 42B. Desh 59 13 28 40Nepal 93 1 6 40S. Lanka 49 21 30 36Bhutan 92 3 3 32Maldives 25 32 43 22

Page 10: CCS Haryana Agricultural University

S A - State of Women Workforce• Employment of WWF is very high• WWF in agriculture often lacks basic services,

education and health care• Low level of rights on productive assets

worsens their situation • Micro-nutrient and vitamin A malnutrition

remain stubbornly high• WWF is most unorganized because of unpaid

nature of work and tradition-forced social responsibility of working maximum, demanding minimum and eating whatever is leftover in the family

Page 11: CCS Haryana Agricultural University

Women – Contribution and Status• Women contribute to two-thirds of the

world’s work hours, produce 50 per cent of the world’s food supplies

• Women work in fields, take care of families and manage household

• Despite the services rendered by women in the family and work place, they make up for nearly 70 per cent of the world’s poor and more than 65 per cent of the illiterates

Page 12: CCS Haryana Agricultural University

Women: The Major Work Force in Agriculture

Page 13: CCS Haryana Agricultural University

Women at Work

Pesticide Spray Wheat harvest

Page 14: CCS Haryana Agricultural University

• Burden of family planning• Dangerous machinery • Unsafe electrical wiring and appliances• Livestock-transmitted diseases• Exposure to toxic pesticides• Reproductive hazards • Stress • Ergonomic adversaries• Data gathered thus far point out that women

with at least a secondary level education eventually give birth to one third to one half as many children as women with no formal education

Health & safety issues of women in Agriculture

Page 15: CCS Haryana Agricultural University

Source: PRB, 2007

Page 16: CCS Haryana Agricultural University

India• India represents more than 90% of the SA

region in terms of land and demographic resources

• In order to narrate new agriculture in the context of education and technology transfer hereafter I cite India data as an illustration

• With minor deviations, Indian situation is generally applicable to state of agriculture in South Asia

Page 17: CCS Haryana Agricultural University

HRD–Perspective Indian Agriculture

• To sustain an agricultural growth rate of 4%, Indian agriculture (for that matter SA agriculture also) must become efficient, diversified, broaden its export basket, and prepare to compete in ever more global markets

• To sustain 4% agricultural growth, India needs new-look technologies, a hierarchical brigade of ‘knowledge and skilled men and women workers’, necessary systemic and institutional reforms in AE, supporting infrastructure and pro-agriculture policies

Page 18: CCS Haryana Agricultural University

Gender-wise student make up (%)

Degree Male Female

B. Sc. 72 28 (6-63)

M. Sc. 67 33 (12-69)

Ph. D. 71 29 (4-75)

Page 19: CCS Haryana Agricultural University

Perspective – gender integration or mainstreaming in AE

• Integration – fitting gender issues within the existing course curricula and programs without adjusting gender considerations in sector and program priorities

• Mainstreaming – gender considerations are central in the construction of educational policy and programs. Not only do the women become part of educational budgeting, women and men jointly reorient majority of the educational agenda

• Mainstreaming has proved to be elusive

Page 20: CCS Haryana Agricultural University

Transition from integration to main- streaming – causes of slow progress• No serious attempt to clearly identify gender

sensitive core AE agenda and development of policy packages in support of that agenda

• Insufficient attention while designing budgets that support women oriented AE agenda (including enabling issues)

• Lack of clear indicators to measure outcome and impact

(Source; modified version of Jahan, 1995,)

Page 21: CCS Haryana Agricultural University

AE – Focus Gender• Common perception: Higher opportunity

costs and lower benefits from educating girls. Preference goes to sons

• General scene: Lack of boarding facilities, separate toilette facilities in schools

• Larger view: AE not a preferred subject for girls

Page 22: CCS Haryana Agricultural University

Female Faculty • Sanctioned strength 23000; in position less than

20,000• 87%, 76% and 79% of the positions of assistant

professors, associate professors and professors are filled

• Relative proportion of females (circa 2000): ~ 20% (10% Assis. Prof., 6% Assoc. Prof. and 4% Prof.)

• In recent years proportion changing fast• Insignificant females in managerial positions

Page 23: CCS Haryana Agricultural University

Level of Technological Awareness and Understanding

• Low level of awareness and understanding on modern farming techniques and lack of competence and necessary skills are fundamental elements of overdependence on agriculture as sole source of livelihoods

• Only 40% of farm households access various sources of information. About 70% information comes from non formal sources to which women have hardly any reach

• Women are also suffer maximum due to less education and training, which discourage mobility and shrink opportunities for off-farm vocations

• Organized education and training cover only 4% of the workforce; 57% workforce dependent on agriculture (in this share of female workforce 85%) remains outside its ambit

Page 24: CCS Haryana Agricultural University

Technological Needs of WWF• Women have different tech. requirements due

to disparate priorities, problems and needs. Examples: food crops for food and fodder, local breeds of livestock, backyard poultry, goat rearing, local herbal remedies, less drudgery, efficient energy for cooking…

• Women need greater awareness and understanding of how technologies affect household economies, their sustainable performance and overall health of environment

• Gender oriented technology transfer and up-skilling women competence is of fundamental necessity if what Himachali women feel “Our lives are no different from that of our bullocks” has to be reversed

Page 25: CCS Haryana Agricultural University

Emerging Issues of SA Agriculture • Falling productivity, profitability & stability of agriculture• Water becoming most critical• Climate becoming more deviating and unpredictable• Land availability shrinking• Agriculture becoming more complex & competitive• Technologies that include WWF to have far larger role

than ever• Markets and consumers are having bigger say in what

and how agricultural produce should be raised• Agricultural research shifting from problem reduction to

problem solving approach• Economic growth will follow equity & gender

mainstreaming• Place of people will be increasingly central to R&D• A new look technology transfer system that treats

agriculture in all its aspects and is responsive to knowledge and skill needs of farm men and women in real time format is necessary to be devised

• Only 40% of the farmers have access to information on modern methods of farming in India

Page 26: CCS Haryana Agricultural University

Relative importance (% farmers) of different sources of accessing information

Source Farmers Source FarmersP. farmers 17 Village fair 02Input dealers 13 Credit agency 02Radio 13 Miscellaneous 02Television 09 Training 01News papers 07 KVK 01Exten. agents 06 NGO/private 01Cooperative Soc. 04 Farmers tours 0.2Output buyers 02 All sources 40Demonstrations 02

Source: NSSO, 2005

Page 27: CCS Haryana Agricultural University

– To infuse faster transfer of environmentally friendly and time appropriate technologies to fulfill food & nutritional needs

– To improve conservation of natural resource– To establish linkages to imbibe changing consumer

needs & promote commercialization, diversification, access to global markets

– To undertake research and technology development & transfer to counter ill effects of natural and man-made growth retardants

– To emphasize development of HR, specifically WWF, by modernizing formal/non-formal education

– Necessity is to develop a new look technology transfer system; village based, farmers and farming system driven, real time, supported by a technology transfer facilitator and above all links farmers to input dealers & output buyers

Common Goals of SA Agriculture

Page 28: CCS Haryana Agricultural University

Trends in food grain production (M tons)

Year Haryana India1998-99 12.1 203.61999-00 13.1 209.82000-01 13.3 196.82001-02 13.3 212.82002-03 12.3 174.82003-04 13.2 213.52004-05 13.1 204.62005-06 13.0 208.6

Data source: Statistical Abstract Haryana (2005-06) and Agricultural Research Data Book (2006)

Page 29: CCS Haryana Agricultural University

Yield-gap Analysis

Crop Farmers’ yield (t/ha)

FLD (t/ha)

% gap % irrigated

Wheat 2.8 3.8 27 86

All oilseeds

0.8 1.2 29 25

All pulses

0.6 1.1 42 16

P. millet 0.4 2.0 56 8

Page 30: CCS Haryana Agricultural University

Need for Comprehensive Solutions – Focus Technology Transfer (TT)

• Farming system approach• Address small and marginal farmers’ concerns• Build rural knowledge economy• Capability development to access and use of new

scientific knowledge

This requires: Scientists to develop situation specific technology

Professionals/para-professionals for fast dissemination of technology

Knowledge and skillful farmers for adoption and application of technology

Page 31: CCS Haryana Agricultural University

Stress Points of TT System• TT service does not cover physical, social and economic

aspects of an integrated farming system• Technology transfer for improving livestock productivity

is covered poorly• Livestock sector largely managed by women- their skill

and knowledge needs remain neglected• Fragmented approach of technology transfer needs

integration; all components (c to c) of farm business do not perform optimally

• Uniform technology packages for all categories of farmers; gender sensitivity atypical miss

• Less emphasis on cautions and precautions for accepting use of agro-chemicals; integrated solutions more a rhetoric and less a reality

• Reach of technology transfer limited (typically to WWF), unable to offer real time solutions. Use of digital solutions only on margins

Page 32: CCS Haryana Agricultural University

Operational holdings in IndiaHolding size (ha) and category

Area (%) Holdings (%)

< 0.5, near landless 7.0 420.5-1.0, marginal 10.2 201.0-2.0, small 18.8 192.0-4.0, semi medium 23.8 124-10, medium 25.3 06> 10, large 14.8 01Source: Agricultural Research Data Book (2006)

Page 33: CCS Haryana Agricultural University

Small and Marginal Farmers• Maximum concentration of poverty• Have less land & more dependent population• Unemployment/underemployment common• Limited marketable surplus• Diversify agriculture more than large farmers• Affected more by resources inadequacies & less due

to technological inappropriateness• Suffer maximum distress during years of natural

disasters • TT method a potential strategy

Page 34: CCS Haryana Agricultural University

A New Extension Model• Addresses a farming system and provides

holistic solutions to raise income, employability and sustainability

• Includes resource poor small & marginal farmers (women also)

• Provides real time solutions for all aspects of farming; is multidisciplinary; emphasizes partnerships; combines traditional and advanced means and methods

• Is village based, assures farmers participation• Focuses on education and training for

intensification, multiple use of resources and vertical integration with a market value chain

• Builds competence & capacity for off-farm enterprises

Page 35: CCS Haryana Agricultural University

Long-term Vision• Long-term vision of the extension model is to

sustainably modernize agriculture in each village and to ensure that every rural person in employable age group (18-60 years) is employed gainfully.

• In short-term (~ 5 years), mission is to partner with other extension/development agencies, grassroots level organizations, private service providers/agri-business houses for creating a sustainable village based real time technology transfer system for the development of agriculture in all its aspects leading to more income, larger employability & ensured health of natural resources

• The technology transfer system will be evolved, tested and applied in two village clusters of 10.

Page 36: CCS Haryana Agricultural University

Context of New Extension Model

• Income • Employment• Sustainability

Page 37: CCS Haryana Agricultural University

Approach and Strategy

• Focus: Education and training for building knowledge and awareness for conservation agriculture, cost reduction, increasing livestock productivity, primary processing, off-farm vocations, protection and sustainable use of natural resources, use of non-conventional energy

• Strategy: Education and training, village based, use of conventional and digital means, partnerships, multidisciplinary and eco-centric approach

Page 38: CCS Haryana Agricultural University

Components

• Technology transfer facilitators• Non-formal technology transfer

agents• Networking of research and diverse

development agencies• ICT• Village-cluster based ATIC• District level ATI

Page 39: CCS Haryana Agricultural University

Organization of New- look Extension System

• Village based: Two enterprising farmers having high school qualification to work as grassroots level extension workers for technology transfer– They will be supported by full time professional-

graduate (PG) – TT facilitators– PG will also facilitate backward-forward links with

markets, credit extending & other agencies, KVKs & HAU scientists

– Assess farmers need and analyze constraints throgh diagnostic studies

– Based on diagnostic analysis he will prioritize the activities in association with the two selected farmers

– Team of graduates pursuing agri-business and agri-clinic scheme will be linked to new TT system

Page 40: CCS Haryana Agricultural University

Organization of New- look Extension System: Contd.

• Agriculture Training Institute: Organized on the pattern of ITI, ATI will build-up a class of expert farmers and self-employable work force in different areas of agriculture for productivity enhancement-

– Trainings in low volume and high income diversified areas

– Primary processing, use of alternate source of energy, nutrient rich feed blocks preparation, seed production

– Apply a right mix of education and training with emphasis on skill building in real life situations

– Use of conventional and ODL will be integrated to enable maximum participation of WWF

Page 41: CCS Haryana Agricultural University

Organization of New- look Extension System: Contd.

• Technology mediated information transfer for learning and skill building:

• Apply real time transfer of technology to modernize agriculture

• To develop decision support expert systems• Link small and marginal farmers to markets • Develop off- farm employment capabilities and

opportunities

Page 42: CCS Haryana Agricultural University

Activities and Programmes

Philosophy: • ATIC facilitates farmers’ participation in -

– Real time information access– Technology transfer and application

• Need based education for knowledge and skill development

• Establishing partnership for inputs and credit supply• Market links for remunerative prices

Page 43: CCS Haryana Agricultural University

Reforms Required• Institutional reforms

– Manpower demand projections to serve holistic development of agriculture and existing and emerging sectors of economy;

– Reorientation of course curricula to develop knowledge, skills and entrepreneurial mindset of students to take up self employment, perform in the job market, contribute to rural livelihood security and attract foreign students;

– Availability of competent faculty and qualified technical aides, – Linking research with industry and field

• System reforms – Infrastructure rehabilitation and refurbishing– Smoothening of administrative procedures– Ensuring financial resource– Transformation of delivery systems through encouragement

approach

Page 44: CCS Haryana Agricultural University

Expected output and outcome• A village based extension system that provides real time

solutions to all aspects of a farming system (from cultivation of crops to rearing and raising of livestock in unison to marketing of produce to its consumption and beyond)

• Enhancement of income and employability leading to improved quality of livelihoods, particularly of small and marginal farm men and women

• Enlarged possibilities for maintaining continuity of agriculture as an enterprise and sustaining quality of natural resources and rural livelihoods

• Availability of a model for harnessing synergy arising from multi-disciplinarily and multi-institutional functioning

Page 45: CCS Haryana Agricultural University

And Finally• AE needs modernization of course curricula to

focus on employability, economic growth, environmental security and gender sensitivity

• AE programs initiate institutional and systemic reforms

• Addresses formal and non-formal education• Harnesses the power of tech-mediated

delivery systems Contd.

Page 46: CCS Haryana Agricultural University

And Still Finally• The extension model suggested by me is

not intended to replace the existing TT system

• It rather strengthens its contribution by focusing more on farming as an integrated enterprise, village based extension, real time extension, gender mainstreaming, partnerships – both with farmers and other agencies performing individually in the village

• It looks for an improved system, a gender sensitive system, a robust system, a sustainable system

Page 47: CCS Haryana Agricultural University