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    In India [ Images ], 72.22 per cent still live in rural areas, even if only 57 per cent earn a livingfrom agriculture. If one understands what the United Progressive Alliance [ Images ] is

    attempting, and if one understands what the NCMP (National Common Minimum Programme)promised, the India Shining effect must be extended to rural areas.

    This is a simple enough proposition. And diverse initiatives are being talked about. First, there isthe National Rural Employment Guarantee Act, which will subsume the National Food for Workprogramme and be used to create rural assets.

    Second, there is the idea that centrally sponsored schemes will be rationalised and devolveddownwards to panchayats. Indeed, some money has already been earmarked for devolution to

    panchayats. Third, there is a cluster idea, emanating from the National Commission for thePromotion of Enterprises and this includes rural clusters.

    Fourth, there is PURA (Provision of Urban Amenities in Rural Areas), with physical

    connectivity (roads, power), electronic connectivity and knowledge connectivity, leading to

    economic or market connectivity.

    Fifth, there is the Rashtriya Sama Vikas Yojana (RSVY), targeted at backward districts, and

    whatever yardstick one uses for identifying backward districts, rural development will fit in.

    Sixth, there is the Bharat Nirman, even if one doesn't know where to find money for it.

    Although there is talk of irrigation and credit, with the former more of an agricultural problem, it

    is perhaps fair to say that policy-wise, there has been a shift from an agricultural policy towards arural development policy.

    This is as it should be, although one doubts that such coherent thinking necessarily characterisesgovernment policy. The 58th round of the NSS (National Sample Survey) for July-December

    2002 resulted in a report on village facilities that covered five heads of proximity toadministrative centres, access to the rest of the economy, physical and social infrastructure,

    coverage of government support programmes and presence of private initiatives.

    Out of India's 600,000 villages, this report tells you how bad physical and social infrastructure isin around 350,000 of them. And perhaps inevitably, where government initiatives have led to no

    results, private initiatives are also non-existent.

    Having said this, we have had rural development programmes for years and years. If these didn't

    work, what is the guarantee that these wonderful new programmes will work now? Simplystating that we will now link outlays to outcomes and that there will be an outcome budget isn'tenough.

    True, the PMGSY (Pradhan Mantri Gram Sadak Yojana) seems to have performed better. Butwhy on earth was the PMGY (Pradhan Mantri Gramodaya Yojana), for rural electrification and

    drinking water, given up?

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    Presumably because it didn't work. If government programmes were horses, rural India wouldhave been riding away to glory by now. Even if we can find Rs 50,000 crore out of that promised

    Rs 174,000 crore, I think the Bharat Nirman idea will work better if we focus on one item alone.Like India's haats.

    At the top of the market hierarchy are mandis, which owe their development partly togovernment policies on agricultural marketing. These 7,161 regulated markets, ormandis, aremostly primary wholesale markets, and are usually governed by APMC (Agricultural Produce

    Marketing Committee) Acts.

    But the point for the moment is not to discuss mandis or the relevance of the APMC Acts, whichhave created monopolies and entry barriers and prevented dis-intermediation. The point is that

    these mandis are primarily wholesale markets, located near important towns or centres ofproduction.

    The mandis that are secondary wholesale markets are also located in district headquarters or

    major trade centres. It is true that every district has a mandi and it is also true that mandis arespread throughout the length and breadth of the country.

    However, the more important point is that small farmers have limited access to these mandis.Transactions take place between commission agents and wholesalers. Market intermediaries

    (adhaatis ordalals or with other names) purchase the farm produce from farmers, often inadvance, and bring it to mandis for sale to wholesalers. Farmers have little access to mandis.

    Unlike the regulated markets, there are also unregulated markets known as haats, peta, angadi,

    hatwari, shandies, chindies orpainths. These are sometimes periodic (once a week) andsometimes permanent. Figures on haats are difficult to obtain.

    But there are believed to be around 47,000 permanent haats, mostly concentrated in Bihar(including Jharkhand), Kerala [ Images ], Madhya Pradesh [ Images ] (including Chhattisgarh),

    Maharashtra [ Images ], Orissa, Uttar Pradesh [ Images ] (including Uttaranchal) and WestBengal [ Images ], all relatively backward parts of the country.

    In haats, dis-intermediation is greater and there is an opportunity for producers to directly sell to

    consumers or small rural retailers, although APMC Acts sometimes prohibit such sales thatbypass mandis. Unlike mandis, small farmers have access to haats. Local bodies usually control

    auctions of space and issue licences and permits to vendors to use these haats.

    Market fees or taxes are collected from the participants, but these are rarely ploughed back todevelop infrastructure.Haats are not equipped with basic facilities like platforms for sale or

    auction, electricity, drinking water, facilities for grading, sorting and so on. It will cost less thanRs 1 crore to upgrade a haat. And that will be true Bharat Nirman.