dc.description.abstract |
This is a report on India’s food crisis. It reaches the inescapable
conclusion that an immediate and drastic increase in food production
is India’s primary problem of the next seven years. It points out that
without food enough, India’s hopes for improving human welfare,
achieving social justice, and securing democracy will become almost
impossible of attainment.
The report has been prepared by an American team of agricultural
specialists brought to India at the request of the Ministry of
Food and Agriculture and the Ministry of Community Development
and Cooperation, with the sponsorship of The Ford Foundation.
Naturally, many aspects of India’s agricultural problems differ
greatly from those of the U.S. But solutions lie in the common experience
of world agricultural development. It was in this context, and
with full regard for India’s present resources and its potential development,
that the1 Team approached its serious assignment.
Within the time allotted, the Team made every effort to study
Indian food production problems carefully and thoroughly. Members
of the Team travelled extensively in all the States of India, interviewed
Government officials at all levels, village cultivators and other private
citizens, and studied, wherever possible, such relevant statistics,
documents and memoranda as were made available. The findings and
conclusions of the Team are contained in the three parts of the report
which follow.
Not only in its travels, but in every step of its inquiries and
discussions, the Team had the able assistance of Indian associates deputed
to work closely and continuously with the Team. With the
help of these associates, apd of discussions wijh Indian leaders, the
Team, in studying food production problems, bore constantly in mind
the broad range of^ Indian objectives for industry, employment and
general economic development and the relationship of agriculture to
them.
As the report itself repeatedly emphasizes, there are no simple
solutions to India’s food production problems. No two or three easy
steps can be taken to allay the impending crisis.
The facts and analyses which lie behind the Team’s conclusions
are found in the body of the report. But as the Team discussed its
findings, with its own members, with its Indian associates, and with
Indian leaders, certain crucial issues, certain major proposals' stood
out above all others for immediate attention and action. |
en_US |