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Fifty three-year-old Gopal Singh Patidar is busy organising a sheaf of papers, his bald pate glistening with beads of perspiration.
An aid walks into his spacious, well-lit room and places a big red diary on his table. He looks up, flashes a pleasant smile and taps the red cloth cover of the diary. “This contains the details of all the sale proceeds at this mandi,” he quips.
Gopal Singh Patidar is the secretary at the sprawling Shujalpur farmers’ market in Madhya Pradesh’s Shajapur district.
The Shujalpur mandi is one of the largest in the state, catering to thousands of farmers and traders. It is also among several mandis in the Malwa region that have been non-functional since 1 June after farmers demanding a hike in the minimum support price for their produce forced their closure.
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Patidar doesn’t have a lot of work to do today.
The shops and storehouses are shut, the empty trucks lie idle. This is in sharp contrast to the normal hustle and bustle of deals struck and struck down between traders and farmers, of the swift but efficient exchange of cash, and of satisfied buyers and sellers.
But that was another time – when the world of the vyapari and the kisan revolved around agricultural produce and hard cash that was at the centre of the farm economy in Madhya Pradesh.
Patidar concurs.
His comments reveal a poorly-kept secret of the Chouhan government that is now trying to douse the flames – literally – of the farmers’ agitation that has gripped the state and crippled the mandis.
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Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s 8 November 2016 demonetisation announcement came at a time when Madhya Pradesh’s farmers were grappling with a crisis involving the progressive plummeting of prices of agricultural produce, including vegetables and pulses.
Demonetisation brought with it a slew of measures. First, the state administration announced that 50 percent of the dealings in the mandis would be in cash and the rest by cheque. Anand Singh Mewada, a relatively wealthy farmer and the president of the Shujapur Zila Panchayat Samiti, says:
Equally problematic was the cheque system which goes through a labyrinthine and wobbly banking process. It can take anything from 15 days to a month, before the money is credited to the accounts of sellers – the farmers. As the problems associated with demonetisation compounded, the Shivraj Singh Chouhan government came up with the system of transferring of money through RTGS (real time gross settlement) and NEFT (national electronic funds transfer).
“Today, suddenly shifting to a new culture is proving to be difficult for those farmers and traders who have for years dealt in cash... these are some of the changes wrought by demonetisation which have significantly contributed to the ongoing farmers,” says Gopal Singh Patidar.
Patidar flicks through the sheaf of papers on his table and shares a state government notification that details the urgency of switching to RTGS and NEFT – terms that are alien for many of Madhya Pradesh’s unlettered farmers.
With the ongoing farmers’ agitation showing no signs of abating, both the farming and the trading communities continue to sustain heavy losses. “Problems wrought by notebandi are yet to be corrected,” Paridar says, adding, the “situation has not normalised”.
The farmers’ agitation, the forced closure of mandis and demonetisation have together cast gloom over Madhya Pradesh’s agricultural economy – which is nowhere near any immediate resolution before the state goes to the polls in 2018.
Before it all began, the Shujalpur mandi would earn an income of 2 percent over the sale proceeds. Now, that has stopped.
Just outside the gates of Shujalpur mandi, the tractors of Hafeez Ali of Richhoda village and Ashok Gerkhadi of Shujalpur, laden with onions, halt as the ignition of the coughing engines are cut off.
“My onions are too small in size, so they are not good enough to be sold at the mandi,” says Ali, as he sits atop the sacks stacked on the tractor carrier.
Ali says he has “no clue how and where to dispose of his under-sized onions”. “I might have to just throw away,” he adds.
On the other hand, Gerkhadi, whose onions are of an acceptable size, confidently drives his tractor into the farthest end of the mandi where he is prepared to store the produce before a buyer – in all likelihood the state government – picks it up for the declared Rs 8 per kilo.
Ashok Vijayvargiya, a Shujalpur farmer trying to find ways out of the agricultural mess in a crippled mandi, says:
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