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The Commercialization of Agriculture in Colonial India: Production, Subsistence and Reproduction in the ‘Dry South’, c. 1870–1930

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  28 November 2008

David Washbrook
Affiliation:
University of Oxford

Extract

Although it would now seem established beyond question that agriculture in most parts of India had been exposed to commercial influences from medieval times, there can be little doubt that a variety of developments from the second half of the nineteenth century greatly strengthened those influences. Railways and road transport made possible a huge expansion in cash cropping, for national and international markets, and production regimes across the subcontinent were placed in a new context of opportunity—and of pressure. While so much would scarcely be disputed among historians, what has become—and remained—more controversial, however, is an understanding of the implications of this extended commercial logic for agrarian economy and society. Since colonial times, opinions would seem to have been divided between ‘optimists’, for whom commercialization marked progress and a growing prosperity for all; ‘pessimists’, for whom it marked regress into deepening class stratification and mass pauperization; and ‘sceptics’ who held that it made very little difference and that its impact was largely absorbed by preexisting structures of wealth accumulation and power on the land.

Type
Articles
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 1994

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References

1 For the growth of commerce in late medieval South India, see Subrahmanyam, S., The Political Economy of Commerce: Southern India 1500–1650 (Cambridge, 1990);CrossRefGoogle Scholaralso Subrahmanyam, S. (ed.), Merchants, Markets and the State in Early Modern India (Delhi, 1990.)Google Scholar

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3 These three positions can be traced back to debates in the later nineteenth century. For a recent optimistic or ‘meliorist’ account of, particularly, Western India, see McAlpin, M., Subject to Famine: Food Crisis and Economic Change in Western India, 1860–1920 (Princeton, 1983);CrossRefGoogle Scholar for a more pessimistic view, Guha, S., The Agrarian Economy of the Bombay Deccan (Delhi, 1985);Google Scholar for a sceptical view, Charlesworth, N., Peasants and Imperial Rule: Agriculture and Agrarian Society in the Bombay Presidency, 1850–1935 (Cambridge, 1985).CrossRefGoogle Scholar

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9 See Government of Madras, Season and Crop Reports (Madras, annual).Google ScholarIn fact, Bellary's crop yield ‘norm’ was briefly reduced for a few years in the 1910s, before being raised back to pre-1900 levels, which the ‘seasonal adjustment’ factor indicates it never reached. Bellary's stagnation is marked against the apparent dynamism of the Southern cotton belt in Coimbatore-Tinnevelly, where, particularly, cotton yields rose noticeably over the period.Google Scholar

10 See below, Section V.

11 The district originally included a number of taluks which, after the Great Famine, were separated off into the separate Anantapur district. Subsequent to that, too, taluk boundaries underwent several changes. At various times between 1890 and 1930, the district varied between 5730 and 5975 square miles.

12 Because of the changes in boundaries, it is easiest to express population changes in these terms. See Census of India, 1871, Report on the Census of the Madras Presidency, vol. 1 (Madras, 1874), p. 68; 1931, vol. 14, pt 2, p. 2.Google Scholar

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49 Francis, Bellary District, p. 135.Google Scholar

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51 See Kolliner, A., ‘The Structure of Rural Credit in the Ceded Districts of the Madras Presidency’, paper presented at Conference of Rural Agrarian History,University of Pennsylvania,1975, pp. 3949.Google Scholar

52 The employment of permanent farm servants seemed closely related to the number of cattle and ploughs kept and amount of wet cultivation undertaken. MPBCE, V, pp. 301, 330, 332.Google Scholar

53 This was rated across all Bellary farming at 5 days of family labour for every 21 days hired. But in purely ‘dry‘ farming it was considerably lower—5.2 days of family labour for 8.1 hired. ICAR, IV, pp. 17, 66–7.Google Scholar

54 G.O. 3628 (Revenue) dated 30 November 1909, Tamilnadu Archives.Google Scholar

55 The three villages examined by the Banking Enquiry were on excellent cotton soil and very close to Bellary town. Nonetheless only between 20 and 30 per cent of their acreages were under cotton. MPBCE, V, pp. 273, 296, 323.Google Scholar

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57 Calculated after ‘disallowing’ for rent. ICAR, IV, p. 21.Google Scholar

58 Ibid., pp. 66–7.

59 MPBCE, V, pp. 324, 332.Google Scholar

60 Of course, local wage rates varied greatly. This figure is based on the ‘commonest’ rate found for male labour in the late 1920s. Quinquennial Wage Censuses (1926).Google Scholar

61 The rains came in June or July and the last harvests in the black-soil areas took place in March.

62 Arnold, , ‘Famine’; also, my Emergence of Provincial Politics, ch. 2.Google Scholar

63 My Emergence of Provincial Politics, chs 2, 3;Google ScholarBaker, , A Rural Economy, ch. 5;Google ScholarArnold, D., Police Power and Colonial Rule, Madras 1859–1947 (Delhi, 1987).Google Scholar

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76 Due to variations in land fertility, it seems preferable to quote revenue asset values (which were, albeit loosely, related to fertility) than simple acreages.

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89 Cotton Committee, pp. 24, 29.Google Scholar

90 Census of India, 1921, vol. XIV, pt 2, p. 120.Google Scholar

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98 Cotton Committee, p. 51.Google Scholar

99 Season and Crop Reports, 1926/1927.Google Scholar

100 The yields are given in Bellary ‘country’ maunds of c. 26 lbs. MPBCE, V, pp. 272335.Google Scholar

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106 ICAR, IV, p. 111.Google Scholar

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108 MPBEC, V, p. 278.Google Scholar

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110 Season and Crop Reports, 1902/1903 and 1933/34.Google Scholar

111 In 1890/91, 85,000 ploughs and 209,000 bulls and bullocks were held to be working 2.1 million acres of cultivation; in 1925/26, 80,000 ploughs and 208,000 bulls and bullocks were held to be working 2.4 million acres. Agricultural Statistics 1890/91 and Season and Crop Reports 1925/1926.Google Scholar

112 ICAR, IV, p. 14.Google Scholar

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120 See my ‘Economic Stratification’.

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