Skip to main content

Slow erosion of farm sovereignty: The hidden cost of India’s free trade agreements

By Prof. Hemantkumar Shah* 
India’s ongoing pursuit of free trade agreements is being celebrated by the Union government as a marker of economic maturity and global ambition. Yet for millions of small and marginal farmers, these deals are fast becoming instruments of economic insecurity and creeping dispossession. This warning was voiced sharply at the Kisan Swaraj Sammelan held near Palanpur, where farmers and activists from a dozen states gathered to reflect on policies reshaping Indian agriculture. The core anxiety expressed was simple: free trade agreements are being negotiated quietly and aggressively, and their burden is falling disproportionately on India’s poorest cultivators.
In 2019 the government trumpeted its decision to walk away from the Regional Comprehensive Economic Partnership, saying it would not jeopardise Indian farmers’ livelihoods. Many believed this signaled a new commitment to safeguarding domestic agriculture. But what has unfolded instead is a backdoor embrace of multiple bilateral and bloc-based pacts—from Japan and South Korea to the UAE, Mauritius, Australia, the UK and New Zealand—as well as groups such as ASEAN and EFTA. These agreements open Indian markets to cheap imports, particularly agricultural goods. When duties are dropped to zero on as much as ninety per cent of incoming products, as seen in last July’s pact with the United Kingdom, it becomes naïve to call this path self-reliance.
Under such agreements, India often relinquishes control over the volume of imports allowed, meaning that foreign commodities can flood Indian markets at will. This problem is compounded by deep global inequalities. Wealthy countries continue to give massive subsidies to their own farmers—averaging the equivalent of forty-six lakh rupees per farmer annually in the United States. Indian cultivators receive barely twenty thousand rupees a year, and this already meagre support is routinely dismissed as “freebies” by the Prime Minister. It is insulting to expect farmers with less land, fewer resources and far smaller safety nets to compete with highly capitalised agribusinesses shielded by lavish state support.
The comparison is absurd on every metric. In the United States, a typical farm spans over 440 acres. Ninety-two per cent of Indian farmers till less than five acres. To call this a competition is like pairing wrestler Dara Singh against an ordinary person and declaring the contest fair simply because both are in the same ring. Yet the rhetoric from policy circles insists that market competition will magically uplift all players. The reality is predictable: small Indian farmers lose before the match even begins.
What is even more worrying is the erosion of India’s autonomy in shaping its agricultural system. The framers of the Constitution declared India a sovereign nation, able to decide its economic priorities free from external pressure. But successive trade agreements suggest that sovereignty is now negotiable. Under pressure from rich nations, the government has avoided challenging their subsidies while cutting support to its own farming communities. Domestic farm policy is being moulded not by the needs of the rural majority but by the demands of global capital and large multinational corporations that already dominate the seed, fertilizer and agrochemical markets.
This contradiction extends to the government’s talk of organic and sustainable farming. While political leaders endorse natural agriculture in speeches, budget allocations are microscopic—less than a fraction of a percent of what is needed. Meanwhile, corporate farming inputs continue to flood the countryside with official blessing. The direction of policy is unmistakable: agriculture is being steered toward corporate dependency and farmer vulnerability.
India stands at a crossroads. It can protect its food producers—the people who feed the nation and sustain the countryside—or it can sacrifice them at the altar of trade liberalisation, hoping that trickle-down economics will somehow fill empty stomachs and stalled futures. Farmers gathered in Palanpur issued a caution grounded in lived experience: free trade agreements, as currently structured, are pushing India’s agriculture toward dependency, foreign control and economic ruin. Unless the government recalibrates its priorities, the promise of Atmanirbhar Bharat will ring hollow in the very fields where it should mean the most.
---
*Senior Gujarat-based economst

Comments

TRENDING

From plagiarism to proxy exams: Galgotias and systemic failure in education

By Sandeep Pandey*   Shock is being expressed at Galgotias University being found presenting a Chinese-made robotic dog and a South Korean-made soccer-playing drone as its own creations at the recently held India AI Impact Summit 2026, a global event in New Delhi. Earlier, a UGC-listed journal had published a paper from the university titled “Corona Virus Killed by Sound Vibrations Produced by Thali or Ghanti: A Potential Hypothesis,” which became the subject of widespread ridicule. Following the robotic dog controversy coming to light, the university has withdrawn the paper. These incidents are symptoms of deeper problems afflicting the Indian education system in general. Galgotias merely bit off more than it could chew.

Farewell to Saleem Samad: A life devoted to fearless journalism

By Nava Thakuria*  Heartbreaking news arrived from Dhaka as the vibrant city lost one of its most active and committed citizens with the passing of journalist, author and progressive Bangladeshi national Saleem Samad. A gentleman who always had issues to discuss with anyone, anywhere and at any time, he passed away on 22 February 2026 while undergoing cancer treatment at Dhaka Medical College Hospital. He was 74. 

From ancient wisdom to modern nationhood: The Indian story

By Syed Osman Sher  South of the Himalayas lies a triangular stretch of land, spreading about 2,000 miles in each direction—a world of rare magic. It has fired the imagination of wanderers, settlers, raiders, traders, conquerors, and colonizers. They entered this country bringing with them new ethnicities, cultures, customs, religions, and languages.

Sergei Vasilyevich Gerasimov, the artist who survived Stalin's cultural purges

By Harsh Thakor*  Sergei Vasilyevich Gerasimov (September 14, 1885 – April 20, 1964) was a Soviet artist, professor, academician, and teacher. His work was posthumously awarded the Lenin Prize, the highest artistic honour of the USSR. His paintings traced the development of socialist realism in the visual arts while retaining qualities drawn from impressionism. Gerasimov reconciled a lyrical approach to nature with the demands of Soviet socialist ideology.

Public money, private profits: Crop insurance scheme as goldmine for corporates

By Vikas Meshram   The farmer in India is not merely a food provider; he is the soul of the nation. For centuries, enduring natural calamities and bearing debt generation after generation while remaining loyal to the soil, this community now finds itself trapped in a different kind of crisis. In February 2016, the Modi government launched the Pradhan Mantri Fasal Bima Yojana (PMFBY) with the stated objective of freeing farmers from the shackles of debt. It was an ambitious attempt to provide a strong safety net to cultivators repeatedly devastated by excessive rainfall, drought, and hailstorms.

'Policy long overdue': Coalition of 29 experts tells JP Nadda to act on SC warning label order

By A Representative   In a significant development for public health, the Supreme Court of India has directed the Food Safety and Standards Authority of India (FSSAI) to seriously consider implementing mandatory front-of-pack warning labels on pre-packaged food products. The order, passed by a bench of Justices J.B. Pardiwala and K.V. Viswanathan on February 10, 2026, comes as the Court expressed dissatisfaction with the regulatory body's progress on the issue.

Unpaid overtime, broken promises: Indian Oil workers strike in Panipat

By Rosamma Thomas  Thousands of workers at the Indian Oil Corporation refinery in Panipat, Haryana, went on strike beginning February 23, 2026. They faced a police lathi charge, and the Central Industrial Security Force fired into the air to control the crowd.

From non-alignment to strategic partnership: India's ideological shift toward Israel

By Bhabani Shankar Nayak*  India's historical foreign policy maintained a notable duality: offering sanctuary to persecuted Jewish communities dating back centuries, while simultaneously supporting Palestinian self-determination as an expression of its broader anti-colonial foreign policy commitments. The gradual shift in Indian foreign policy under Hindutva-aligned governance — moving toward a strategic partnership with Israel while reducing substantive engagement with the Palestinian cause — raises legitimate questions about ideological motivation and geopolitical consequence.

Development vs community: New coal politics and old conflicts in Madhya Pradesh

By Deepmala Patel*  The Singrauli region of Madhya Pradesh, often described as “India’s energy capital,” has for decades been a hub of coal mining and thermal power generation. Today, the Dhirouli coal mine project in this district has triggered widespread protests among local communities. In recent years, the project has generated intense controversy, public opposition, and significant legal and social questions. This is not merely a dispute over one mine; it raises a larger question—who pays the price for energy development? Large corporate beneficiaries or the survival of local communities?