Abstract
This study investigates the efficacy of institutional and technological measures in reducing farmers’ vulnerability and increasing their adaptation to climatic extremes. In the winter of March 2015 unseasonal rainfall and hailstorms damaged standing crops in most of the North Indian states. Based on a survey of over 800 farmers in 12 affected districts of the states of Haryana and Punjab, we study the effectiveness of government compensations, crop insurance, and relaxation in norms of wheat procurement in mitigating the impact of crop loss. We find that compensation for crop loss and crop insurance were of limited help to the farmers. Our strong recommendation is that, for these ex-post measures to work effectively we must address problems in accurate loss assessment. The study also indicates that improved drainage in fields and weather forecasting could also help. In fact, the survey revealed that around 20–30% farmers were able to reduce their losses in at least one plot. Though the role of disaster-relief measures cannot be underestimated in coping with such contingencies, reliance on them can be minimized by making farmers’ fields resilient to sudden weather aberrations.
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Notes
- 1.
Haryana and Punjab had recorded an excess rainfall of 71.9 and 68.5%, respectively. Eastern and western UP had recorded an excess of 50.2 and 66.4%, respectively, while western and eastern MP had recorded an excess of 54 and 73.6% respectively.
- 2.
Major reasons for the attrition were that farmers did not answer their phones, or we could not connect to them due to the network problems at their end.
- 3.
The study was conducted before implementing the Prime Minister Agriculture Insurance Scheme in India.
- 4.
Under a government scheme introduced in 1988 farmers were issues Kisan Credit Cards for meeting their short-term credit needs http://agridr.in/banking/PDF/Kisan%20Credit%20Card.pdf.
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Tajuddin Khan, M., Joshi, P.K., Kishore, A., Pandey, D. (2019). Policy Measures for Reducing Vulnerability to Climate Extremes in Agriculture: Lessons from the Case of Unseasonal Rainfall in Haryana and Punjab, India. In: Pal, B., Kishore, A., Joshi, P., Tyagi, N. (eds) Climate Smart Agriculture in South Asia. Springer, Singapore. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-981-10-8171-2_8
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