Wednesday, March 14

Agriculture Adventures

The next leg of my discover-livelihoods-adventure took me to Ghanpur in Warangal District, about 120 kms from Hyderabad. This time I was trying to understand what agricultural livelihoods looked like. Ghanpur about 10,000 population and on Hyd-Warangal Main Road – by no means a small village. My NGO friends were able to however take me another 10-15 kms away from the road and into a less accessible area where the NGO is working on a watershed program.

Impressions:

  • Agriculture? Give me a job any day! This patterns repeats from Pochampalli. I’m here doing this agriculture thing because there’s nothing else to do. Give me an opportunity, I’d rather go and work in a job with a salary at the end of the month. The kids? I’m sending them to school so they can at least go get that job. If they don’t, bad luck… they’ll probably end up doing agriculture till they find an opportunity!
  • What’s there to learn about agriculture?!! The dealer’s a good enough source of info! This was interesting. The farmers clearly thought there was no skill-learning that was relevant to their livelihood, At the most they would need continuous information… and the local dealer at the market was good enough for that!
  • BSC Agriculture vs an “agriculture ITI”. My NGO friend had a different perspective. Continuous learning was relevant for agriculture… it’s just the farmer didn’t realize that fact. However, he adds quickly – “what we need is not more agriculture Degree courses – that’s not going to help – they’ll all go and sell seed and fertilizer anyway for big companies. Neither will very short term intensive lecturing / training work – ever seen a farmer cooped up in a training session? He’s spaced out in 2 hours max. What might work is a very practical knowledge and skills approach like in the ITIs. Good enough to support a livelihood and provide context for sound learning – but not complex and demanding as a degree. On the whole, a much better option”. Hmm. Well. Certainly makes sense to my way of thinking!
  • Just how many cell phones was that?? I read a TRAI report that says India added 6.8 million cell phone connections in Jan 2007. I nodded, thought of a billion people, and filed away a purely numerical data point in my head. When I met 10 farmers working in the middle of practically nowhere, and discovered two of them had cell phones, the impressions hit the gut. This is moving faster and bigger than I’d imagined.
  • We talk, not sms! Even with all those cell phones, SMS (that scourge that possesses large numbers of people in urban areas) seemed happily irrelevant and absent. First, why type when I can speak? Two, how the hell am I supposed to use English for messaging? Three, even if my handset and service were to supports local language, can you imagine the interface nightmare to type Indian language phonemes using phone keys??
  • What’s a computer? No, no one’s seen a computer. Doesn’t seem like any sort of meaningful contraption for our friends the farmers. Obviously asking about the internet didn’t make any sense. The cell phone and internet aren’t yet talking to each other – for a variety of reasons: cost of service, handset capability and a simple lack of meaningful web based content / services for the farmers
  • 10k to 130k in 6 months flat. And going higher. Land prices – including land no one particularly cared about – just went through the roof. The people buying it are just investing in real estate because it’s the hot thing in the first quarter of 2007. Definitely no agricultural interests! Can anyone think of a good reason why a farmer might not be sorely tempted to sell off his lands?
  • Loan-ly state of affairs. I ask my friendly farmers - why not take loans to improve agricultural practices or invest in other / related livelihoods? Dairy or livestock, perhaps? I get indulgent let’s-humor-her smiles all around. Getting a loan from a bank without pledging land as collateral is about as plausible as snowfall in May in Warangal. And later I’m educated by my untiring guide – loans are taken for seed, and for weddings. Nothing else seems to merit a financial mis-adventure as grave a taking a loan!!


Compared to Pochampalli, this trip was as different the proverbial chalk and cheese. But completely educative, nonetheless!

Saturday, January 27

Close encounters with Livelihoods - Pochampalli

For a long time, I've thought of the questions of learning, learning for life and learning in the context of "making a living". And since the question has kept me engaged for so long, how about focussing my research question on the topic? Not a bad idea...

Step 1: Get a broader view of livelihoods. Read, talk, discuss a bit. And I figured there was loooots to be read - and I scraped the tip of the iceberg.
That being done, I was itching to go and get a look at a wider variety of livelihoods, first hand. I called up my good friends working all over the country and began my first brush with a non-urban, non-IT livelihood: Weaving in Pochampalli. Not really far away from "Urban" at 50 km from Hyderabad, just an hour, even in the bumpy red government bus... but still, not exactly your mall-infested city.

Some events and impressions that stayed with me and gave me much to reflct on:
  • The weavers (at least all the ones I met) have an almost pre-prepared "script" to tell an outsider about themselves, their work and their woes. I don't for a moment doubt they have their troubles, but obviously, they've seen many many people come asking for their story. And quite predictably, they are quick to play up the "I-am-downtrodden-and-the-world-is-so-cruel" aspect of their lives. I repeat - it's not that I don't empathise with their genuine issues ... but I guess the "outsider-interest" in their lives might have gone too far.
  • Pochampally weaving is an amazingly complex, skill intensive and time consuming activity. I'll need the rest of 4 blog entries just to describe it, so you can just read it elsewhere or hang in with my observation without a description. My weaver friends told me they make about Rs 200 (about 4USD) per saree... and they need 45 days to make 8 sarees. And that's 8 sarees of the same design... change the design and you've exended the production life cycle! A typical silk saree sells for around Rs 2000 to the customer (45USD) That left me thinking... what real value is being added here? "Completely hand made" ... is that a vlaue that the market is willing to pay for? And will the price for that perceived value be adequate to cover costs for the weavers?? What would automation do to this? Does it kill the "traditional", "artistic" aesthetics of the saree? Is automation impossible (as the weavers seem to be convinced). Is there another way to improve the economic incentives in this activity??
  • "Who wants to weave?? I want to do computers". That's the common refrain from everybody - the 60ish year old master weaver to the kid just out of school. Computers is where the good life is. What of computers? you ask them. What does it mean to you? "Computers are well... you can do accounts", "With computers, you can get a job", "I dont know, I havent seen one, but Computers are the only way forward". Most of the younger kids are not familiar with weaving and dont intend to be. Neither do their parents want it. The old man at a shop near the bus stop asks me - in a friendly sort of way - what do I do for a living? Did I come here by car? How come I know Telugu? What do you call a banana in English? We fall to talking - and he tells me quite confidently "Teach all these kids computers! Only then is there some hope"
  • Along with computers is the conviction that English is the way forward, the city is the way forward.. and interstingly for the two girls I spent all afternoon with - working and earning your own money is the way forward.

Watch this space for continued adventures with other livelihoods, in other places...