Private investments in groundwater irrigation and smallholder agriculture in West Bengal: opportunities and constraints

Private investments in groundwater have emerged as the main pathway through which smallholder farmers in India access irrigation. This paper discusses the role of groundwater in agrarian growth in West Bengal, India. It finds that agricultural growth in the state has stagnated since mid-1990s, after an initial period of growth in the 1980s and early 1990s. We hypothesize that this stagnation was a direct result of slowdown in growth in groundwater irrigation. The reason for this slowdown was, in turn, government policies related to groundwater and electricity. The paper then goes on to discuss the Groundwater Act of 2005 as well as electrification policies of the government of West Bengal and locates these policies within the broader backdrop of groundwater resource endowments in the state. By juxtaposing groundwater policies and resource realities, the paper questions the relevance of current regulations and suggests some policy alternatives - alternatives that are likely to propel the state and its smallholder farmers on a path of higher agricultural growth.

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Mukherji, Aditi, Banerjee, Partha Sarathi, Biswas, Durba
Format: Book Chapter biblioteca
Language:English
Published: Springer Singapore 2018
Subjects:groundwater irrigation, private investment, smallholders, farmers, agricultural development, agrarian reform, groundwater table, groundwater extraction, legislation, water policy, electrification, tube wells, costs, state intervention, villages, monsoon climate, rice,
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/111065
https://vlibrary.iwmi.org/pdf/H050084.pdf
https://doi.org/10.1007/978-981-10-3889-1_38
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