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I
don’t know how many of metromaniacs know that
the changes in rural India are coming pretty
faster than what they would have even dreamt of.
The life style of the rural people is changing
too. There are hardly any cattle now in
households. Both, the bullock-drawn carts and
ploughs are gone forever. So no one is required
to look after the cattle. In my childhood, we,
as even a small landlord, used to keep some 6
persons as the whole timers for the whole year.
Harvester Combines have taken over even the
highly manual harvesting- reaping and thrashing
that was a time taking operation too. Houses are
today bricked ones, so the ritual of annual
repair work before the rainy season requiring
the manual labour has gone.
My cousin who looks after the farming in our
village says, the farmer today is hardly
required to be engaged for a maximum of 30 days.
There are some significant social changes too.
Some persons, generally women, used to be
engaged for drawing water from the wells for
household requirements. Presence of a
hand-operated tube well in each house has done
away with that work. Women of the village hardly
anymore work for even the paddy transplantation
in the fields. The operation is now a totally
male affair with expert gangs coming from other
region of the state to do that work on contract.
They do it better and fast too. All these
changes have meant loss of jobs for the people
of the village. Naturally quite a large number
of them are immigrating to towns and metros or
to other states with all the associated problems
for the urban development. And the population in
the villages consists more of the aged ones.
If the rural India wish to keep its children
engaged in the village itself and the rural
economy flourishing, a new approach is
necessary. Some out of the landless households
are leasing the land of those landowners who
don’t farm themselves. But others are still in
need of useful and paying engagements. Villagers
now own today a number of mechanical, electrical
and electronics appliances- tractors,
motorcycles, diesel pumps, harvesters, oil, rice
and flourmills, music systems, cookers, cooking
gas stoves, electrified households with solar
plates or grid electricity and colour TVs.
Presently, the villagers generally go to the
town for the repair. One can see hordes of these
repair shops while entering or exiting from the
road going through the towns. Young persons from
the village don’t get themselves properly
skilled in repair of these appliances. If they
get trained, they can take up this work as
profession, become self-employed and remain in
their own village. Some more may be required to
maintain solar plates and household electrical
fittings and appliances with rural
electrification spreading in rural India.
Some may also go for some new work. One such
work is to produce compost that can replace
costly fertilizers effectively, if marketed
well. The task can engage some men on regular
basis, if understood properly. Unfortunately,
there is hardly any move for that, even though
many of the farmers know by now that the
chemical fertilizers are spoiling the soil of
the agriculture fields and making it gradually
less fertile.
Can’t the government and the manufacturing
company such as M&M or Escorts for tractors,
Bajaj Auto and Hero Honda for motorcycles, open
these skill- building facilities in rural India?
Will it not be helpful in growth of the
manufacturers’ business further? Can’t some
affluent or educated among these rural young men
become the dealers of these companies and its
spare parts?
And then how can the rural economy afford to
keep the women folks without any productive
work? The women are talented and knowledgeable
in many skills such as stitching, different
types of rural art and craft, rural food
processing, dressmaking, and nursing from their
childhood. A formal training enhancing the
talent can make them employable? We require
these skill-building centres in every village
for every child that can’t pursue higher
education. This is an absolute necessity for
building a strong economy. Once some one even
without much formal education gets trained as
mason, carpenter, or electrician properly, his
employability improves. He can earn in his own
village or outside the state or even in
countries abroad where many are immigrating to
build a better career.
No amount of NREG (National Rural Employment
Guarantee) plans can improve the rural economy
on long term. Some sort of manufacturing bases
are essential in rural areas to engage more and
more local people that are entering workforce.
With expansion of rural electrification,
manufacturing can take base in rural India as it
did in China. I still remember a story from
China’s rural area where a teacher took a lead
in starting a shock manufacturing facility and
in very short period, the village was a cluster
for shock manufacturing supplying millions of
shocks to the domestic market as well as for the
export. India will have to emulate the Chinese
model of manufacturing. Every household will
have to be a manufacturing unit however small it
may be. That can only provide employment and
bring real long-term prosperity in rural India.
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