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A Government Programme in Kerala Is Turning Women into Agripreneurs: Must Read

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Kudumbashree’s holistic approach towards financial empowerment has worked wonders in Kerala.

The ‘Naivedyam’, or food offering, made during different prayers and rituals for Lord Krishna at the world famous Guruvayur temple in Thrissur district of Kerala, includes about 1,200 bananas of a rare variety called ‘Pooja Kadali’. Earlier, to give this daily offering, the temple was dependent on supply from Tamil Nadu, as this special variety was on the verge of extinction in Kerala. However, now, women agriculturists are growing these bananas on 47 acres, under seven panchayats of Kodakara block, and supplying them to the temple, ensuring a taste of homegrown plantain for the revered deity.

“I am part of a five-member Joint Liability Group and we cultivate bananas, vegetables, and paddy on about 15 acres of land. We supply the fruit to the Labour Cooperative Society, which has a deal with the Guruvayur Devaswom Board, under the auspices of the State government’s ‘Kudumbashree’ programme. Around 750 women in 150 groups are cultivating bananas in our block,” says 54-year-old Shobhana Krishnamurthy of Muttathoor panchayat.

Kudumbashree, the Kerala government’s poverty alleviation programme launched in 1998, has brought about a green revolution in the state today.
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Photo source: newseq.blogspot.com
It has done this solely by tapping into women’s potential for farming and entrepreneurship.

“The Guruvayur temple only accepts ‘Pooja Kadali’ of a stipulated size (7000 apex.), so those bunches that don’t meet the criteria are then utilised for making ‘Rasayanam’, an ayurvedic preparation, in collaboration with an Ayurvedic pharmaceutical company. About 20,000 bottles of ‘Rasayanam’ are being made in our block every month,” adds Krishnamurthy.

Farming has taken off in a big way among women under Kudumbashree’s collective farming and ‘Samagra’ projects, implemented with active participation from Panchayati Raj Institutions (PRIs) and supported by a farming subsidy. Not only has the project increased agricultural production, it has also brought considerable fallow land back under cultivation and financially empowered thousands of women.

Joint Liability Groups (JLGs), structured under the National Bank for Agriculture and Rural Development (NABARD) guidelines, have been formed to ensure agricultural credit from banks for women cultivators. The JLGs come under the interest subsidy scheme of Kudumbashree, when they avail agricultural loans from banks – the state government provides a subsidy of five per cent on the seven per cent interest of agricultural loan. So far, around 10,543 JLGs have availed of loans amounting to over Rs. 123 crore under the project.

“In Muttathoor panchayat alone, 504.85 acres are being cultivated under Kudumbashree’s collective farming and Samagra projects,” shares Dhanya Vijayan, 30, Community Development Society Accountant, Muttathoor panchayat.

Data collected in 2013-14 indicates that 47,611 JLGs are cultivating on 40,218 hectares, growing paddy, fruits such as pineapple, bananas; vegetables like bitter gourd, amaranthus, snake gourd, cowpea, watermelon, bottle gourd, ginger, tapioca, ridge gourd, lady’s finger, brinjal, and chilli. Coconut and cashew are popular crops as well.

“We have debunked the theory that agriculture is not profitable. Our group ‘Aishwarya’ took a bank loan of Rs. 60,000 for cultivating the ‘Nendran’ variety of bananas on 75 cents of land, which had been lying bare. We paid off the loan in just six months. The subsidy was a big help. We made a profit of one lakh in one season,” says 39-year-old Bina Pradeep of Vallachira village.

As the women have discovered, the trick to making things work in their favour is by putting in their own labour.

“Hiring workers is expensive in Kerala as daily wages are Rs. 700-750. That is why big landlords don’t make profit. We have leased land from landowners and are still able to turn in a profit because we put in the labour ourselves,” elaborates 35-year-old Surabhi Sivan, whose five-member JLG ‘Jeeva’ leased a two-acre plot to cultivate bananas.

“We paid Rs. 54,000 for the lease, gave back the bank’s one lakh rupees loan in six months and still made a profit,” she says proudly.

Across Kerala, there are many such success stories.
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Leela C.K. and Omana C.C. with the tiller machine at their paddy field. The duo attended the panchayat’s training courses and can confidently work the machines. (Credit: Ajitha Menon\WFS)

Kudumbashree lists the collective farming venture at Kaipram under Perambra panchayat in Kozhikode district at the top. Here, 170 acres of fallow land was recovered and put under paddy cultivation with the efforts of 256 women belonging to 53 groups. While the seeds were procured from Krishi Bhavan, the manure was provided by the gram panchayat, which gave Rs. 1,80,000 for equipment. The women have turned an overall profit of Rs. 20 lakh.

In another case, 30,000 women banana cultivators belonging to 6,000 JLGs pushed up banana production in Thiruvananthapuram district from 8 to 20 metric tonnes per hectare. The phenomenal change was brought about under the guidance of the Kerala Agricultural University.

Additionally, facilitated by Kudumbashree, the women executed a buy back arrangement on the produce with a private company. The JLGs leased the farming land, conducted comprehensive soil surveys, set up demonstration plots and carried out integrated pest management practices, to make the venture a model project.

Ensuring a profit has been the underlining factor in Kudumbashree’s agriculture revolution.

Towards this, gram panchayats across the state train women in using farming equipment and machinery, creating Kudumbashree’s own ‘Vanitha Karma Sena’ or Green Army.

“Money is lost if you have to pay the coconut tree climber, the tiller machine operator or the sowing machine operator. We have trained the women to operate different agriculture related machines themselves and with loans and support available to buy equipment, most groups now own and operate their machines, saving considerable amount of money,” explains Bindu Shivdasan, 40, President, Muttathoor panchyat.

There are nine women coconut tree climbers in her panchayat and several women are operating tiller and sowing machines.

Leela C.K., 60, of Palliparam village under Paralam panchayat in Thrissur district, is a case in point.
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Leela C.K. of Palliparam village may be 60 years old, but she tirelessly works on the land and even operates heavy machines with ease. (Credit: Ajitha Menon\WFS)

Her group cultivates paddy on her three-acre plot once a year. She operates her own agriculture machines. “I attended the panchayat’s training courses and can confidently work the machines, as does my friend Omana C.C., who is 60 as well. Age is no factor and this saves the group a lot of money in wages,” remarks Leela.

Apart from their regular production, the women nurture a kitchen garden on ten cents of land, producing different leafy vegetables, brinjal, lady’s finger, beans and chilli. “We share the produce and use the vegetables ourselves. This ensures a steady supply of cost-effective nutrition for our families as the labour is ours and seeds are available free from Krishi Bhavan,” says Omana.

Bad weather can ruin the crops sometimes, as experienced by Surabhi Shivan and her group ‘Jeeva’ last year.

However, Kudumbashree’s holistic approach towards financial empowerment worked wonders.

“The micro-credit facility available under Kudumbashree allowed us to take another loan to make up the loss and this year we are sure to make a good profit,” says Shivan.

Kudumbashree has provided the wherewithal, but it is the sheer hard work, entrepreneurship and sincerity towards commitments like repaying bank loans that has seen the women in Kerala surmount challenges and hurdles such as the lack of land and finances, natural calamities and labour issues to lead a green revolution in their state. This has made them the cornerstone of the food security movement – that too in a notoriously consumer state!

Kerala's Kudumbashree Programme is Turning Women into Agripreneurs

If states up north put even 1/10th of the effor kerela puts into its people whole of India will transform .
 
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This is such a commie thing to do...most of Kerala is now solidly middle class. No Malayalee wants to farm anymore. They want to work in air conditioned offices and spend weekends in a mall.

Instead of building the kind of jobs people actually want, they get these poor old women, who should be at home watching their cholesterol count push tin plate contraptions around in paddy fields while their men folk stir up political trouble during the day and get drunk at night.
 
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This is such a commie thing to do...most of Kerala is now solidly middle class. No Malayalee wants to farm anymore. They want to work in air conditioned offices and spend weekends in a mall.

Instead of building the kind of jobs people actually want, they get these poor old women, who should be at home watching their cholesterol count push tin plate contraptions around in paddy fields while their men folk stir up political trouble during the day and get drunk at night.

You are wrong man:-)
 
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No Malayalee wants to farm anymore
That's what I said dude :-)

No Malayalee wants to farm anymore...they hate it...they want office jobs.

Glad we are in agreement here :-)

Or are you saying they like to run around knee deep in mud through paddy fields . Gentleman farming ie getting Bangladeshis or Biharis to do the work and spending evenings at the club sipping rum - yes that Malayalees will like.


The need of the hour in Kerala is middle class jobs so that young educated people don't have to go looking for it elsewhere and their middle aged mommies don't have to take up rice farming to make ends meet.
 
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That's what I said dude :-)

No Malayalee wants to farm anymore...they hate it...they want office jobs.

Glad we are in agreement here :-)

Or are you saying they like to run around knee deep in mud through paddy fields . Gentleman farming ie getting Bangladeshis or Biharis to do the work and spending evenings at the club sipping rum - yes that Malayalees will like.


The need of the hour in Kerala is middle class jobs so that young educated people don't have to go looking for it elsewhere and their middle aged mommies don't have to take up rice farming to make ends meet.

Malayalee still likes to have farming and also like to run around knee deep in mud through paddy fields. (with their ducks):-)
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But they have started to have more organic products and concentrating on rooftop agriculture alongwith Traditional agriculture:-)

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Good god. They are growing Freaking bananas, not something exotic.

Bananas grow like Weed. They are one of the easiest plants to grow. They just need a lot of water.

The entire article is a fluff piece. :lol:
 
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That's what I said dude :-)

No Malayalee wants to farm anymore...they hate it...they want office jobs.

Glad we are in agreement here :-)

Or are you saying they like to run around knee deep in mud through paddy fields . Gentleman farming ie getting Bangladeshis or Biharis to do the work and spending evenings at the club sipping rum - yes that Malayalees will like.


The need of the hour in Kerala is middle class jobs so that young educated people don't have to go looking for it elsewhere and their middle aged mommies don't have to take up rice farming to make ends meet.


you are right in the current situation Most do not want to get dirty and no one can blame them because most folks have moved up the economic ladder. But see there can come a major change. Oil era is getting disrupted. Somewhere I read, "The stone age did not end due to lack of stones, and so will oil age". Electric cars and chargers stations, solar is ramping up right as we speak, in the west. Most the Gulf malayalees will return, this will provide the great impetus to start Agri-industry again in Kerala.

As an optimist, I see Kerala having future in Tourism, Medical tourism, organic farming, IT. Kerala is clean and all we need is for the communists to get a little more pragmatic towards Capitalism.
 
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you are right in the current situation Most do not want to get dirty and no one can blame them because most folks have moved up the economic ladder. But see there can come a major change. Oil era is getting disrupted. Somewhere I read, "The stone age did not end due to lack of stones, and so will oil age". Electric cars and chargers stations, solar is ramping up right as we speak, in the west. Most the Gulf malayalees will return, this will provide the great impetus to start Agri-industry again in Kerala.

As an optimist, I see Kerala having future in Tourism, Medical tourism, organic farming, IT. Kerala is clean and all we need is for the communists to get a little more pragmatic towards Capitalism.
If Kerala had a half way sensible government, it would have been a paradise on earth.

Cochin should be a free port like Singapore and connected to manufacturing centers in Tamil Nadu and Karnataka with expressways and high speed railway.

Tourism should be more than just house boats, there should be fun things to do. Mountain hiking, sports, casinos.

And people should get the kind of jobs at home that they go all the way to the gulf to do. Middle class jobs.
 
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If Kerala had a half way sensible government, it would have been a paradise on earth.

Cochin should be a free port like Singapore and connected to manufacturing centers in Tamil Nadu and Karnataka with expressways and high speed railway.

Tourism should be more than just house boats, there should be fun things to do. Mountain hiking, sports, casinos.

And people should get the kind of jobs at home that they go all the way to the gulf to do. Middle class jobs.

With an manufacturing powerhouse in Coimbatore and Tirupur nearby Kerala didnt utilise any opportunity for Cochin.

They must learn from what Hosur did to Bangalore and now Sri City doing to Chennai. But Kerala ministers are busy asking the young to get a job in Gulf.
 
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If Kerala had a half way sensible government, it would have been a paradise on earth.

Cochin should be a free port like Singapore and connected to manufacturing centers in Tamil Nadu and Karnataka with expressways and high speed railway.

Tourism should be more than just house boats, there should be fun things to do. Mountain hiking, sports, casinos.

And people should get the kind of jobs at home that they go all the way to the gulf to do. Middle class jobs.



With an manufacturing powerhouse in Coimbatore and Tirupur nearby Kerala didnt utilise any opportunity for Cochin.

They must learn from what Hosur did to Bangalore and now Sri City doing to Chennai. But Kerala ministers are busy asking the young to get a job in Gulf.

Paradise lost a long ago.
KNR-UTY-UNION.jpg

with foreign remittance in such a value Kerala became rich among Indian states but no steps were taken to utilize those funds for development & industrialization rather they bought & invested on real estates and expensive high value goods & luxurious goods. Now tables are turning year by year more working peoples gone to abroad and unskilled people who are of no use stayed in kerala trying to create hell in the paradise.
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use to love my place when my Grand Parents alive but after that, i feel its a different world. people there consider natives who, had to leave kerala for their family were looked as videshis or foreigners. Even after i reminded them that i have not left country and living in Karnataka neighboring state they tell me your are tourist staying for limited period and your are from Mysore Kingdom:mad:. that was one of the most awkward days of my stay in kerala:(.
 
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While i agree with most of the criticism on this thread, no one is discussing the topic posted in OP......

Kudumbasree is one thing which has been taken off well in Kerala, and it still continues to grow...... and lot of families are benefited from this (i mean those few families who do not have someone working in ME)......

There are several welfare schemes announced thru this...... The latest i heard was providing 10000 auto rikshaws to their family
 
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While i agree with most of the criticism on this thread, no one is discussing the topic posted in OP......

Kudumbasree is one thing which has been taken off well in Kerala, and it still continues to grow...... and lot of families are benefited from this (i mean those few families who do not have someone working in ME)......

There are several welfare schemes announced thru this...... The latest i heard was providing 10000 auto rikshaws to their family
The point I was trying to make is that this is a bit like going to the doctor with cancer and he gives you statins to lower your cholesterol. No doubt your cholesterol numbers go down, but however plaque free your arteries are you are going to die from the untreated cancer.

The problem with the left in India is that they have only one medicine and they give that for every problem - sometimes it works - mostly it does not or makes things worse.


They provided 10,000 auto rickshaws - great - but a good 90% of auto drivers in Kerala and probably 100% of the younger ones are well educated. They SHOULD NOT BE DRIVING AUTO RICKSHAWS. It is a waste of their education and their brains. the government should put its effort into providing THE KIND OF JOBS PEOPLE DESERVE . But They are too ideologically rigid and simply do not have the imagination to create the right policies so they continue to do what they know how to do. That was fine for the state a generation ago but not anymore.

So the cancer remains untreated.
 
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The problem with the left in India is that they have only one medicine and they give that for every problem - sometimes it works - mostly it does not or makes things worse.

The problem with left is that they know only medicine, and the medicine was good few decades back, Today their medicine is outdated or passed the expiry date...... Today they are in cross roads and they are finding it difficult to change the tracks. and they have huge numbers of die hard comrades, who have been taught a particular ideology and changing it will be very difficult to explain to them...... They are stuck, and slowly and steadily they are loosing their significance....

No Malayalee wants to farm anymore

The reason is mentioned in the OP...... Labor rates are so high that it is not viable for a landlord...... unskilled labor charges close to 700 rupee a day..... The other part is even if you pay 700 rupee you do not have manpower to do the job.....

Today kerala is running because of the workers from Bengal and orissa........
 
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