Voluntary social systems are the most understudied subject in public policy, with the preference being for coercive structures. This blog is dedicated to finding non-coercive solutions to our social problems.
Editor-in-chief Shekhar Gupta writes in the
Indian Express, Jan 7, 2006,
"My third cheering story of the week did not even make front-page headlines. I found it buried on one of the commodity pages of Business Standard this Thursday and from my reading at least it seemed as if the reporter had missed the point a bit. The story complained that government-owned sugar mills were struggling to get steady cane supplies because private companies in the state were offering prices higher than the state-mandated minimum support price of Rs 113 per quintal. Some private companies, the report said, were offering up to 15 rupees more than that. Some were even luring the farmer with freebies like tins of desi ghee and sacks of DAP fertiliser (needed in large amounts in this, the rabi wheat season).
NOW this is in a state that was notorious for starving sugarcane farmers by delaying payment for their supplies to its own sugar mills for years together. In fact it was in response to this that Rahul Gandhi had made his maiden intervention in the Lok Sabha to get the cane farmers' "arrears" released. If in that very state the farmers are now not merely being paid on time, but paid more than the minimum support price and also wooed with freebies by private companies, isn't that a story of reform? "
The
entire article is an eye-opener on the changing environment in India.