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Secondary agriculture: Upgrading agriculture for jobs and income

By: Publication details: Springer Nature; 2025; New YorkDescription: xxviii, 310 pagesISBN:
  • 9789819642489
Summary: A first of its kind, this authored book marshals data and logic that necessitate the agriculture sector to transcend beyond its conventional role of securing food, fodder, and feed. It examines India's growing working population and juxtaposes it with the declining labour demand in the secondary and tertiary sectors of the economy, on account of the deployment of disruptive suite of labour-substituting technologies. Therefore, the conventional developmental models that hypothesize the shifting of surplus manpower from agriculture to non-agricultural sectors may not stand the test of scrutiny in the twenty-first century. Hence, the need for remandating the agricultural sector to generate gainful jobs and supplementary incomes in an ecologically synchronous manner for sustainability. The book draws the readers' attention to the importance of bioeconomy and circular economy. To enhance the biologically dependent cumulative agri-output, it recommends the adoption of supplementary and complementary activities. These interventions, along with processing (food and non-food), aid in minimizing food loss, enhancing value capture in favour of the farmers and other value chain stakeholders, and creating gainful jobs and linked incomes resulting in higher enterprise-profits. This progresses the agricultural sector into a bioeconomy anchored around secondary agriculture. Agri-processing being integral to secondary agriculture can be practiced at various scales beginning from micro to small to medium to large. The book highlights both the scope for such enterprises in India and the challenges they are vulnerable to. In the context of sub-par levels of jobs and income in the farm sector, the book emphasizes on micro-enterprises, and suggests the clusterization of entrepreneurs and digitalization along the value chain to achieve competitiveness. The book also deliberates on market-led production matrix, and value chain-based extension services to meet the feedstock demands of secondary agriculture. This book is of relevance to a range of individuals and organizations concerned with agriculture. They include academics, researchers, professionals, universities, domestic & international organizations, bankers & financial institutions, FPOs, entrepreneurs, policymakers, and students.
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Holdings
Item type Current library Call number Status Date due Barcode
Books Books Dr VKRV Rao Library 338.1 DAL (Browse shelf(Opens below)) Checked out to Akshay Subhashrao Deshmukh (1007) 09/08/2025 34114

Table of contents (13 chapters)

Employment and Income: Route to Farmers’ Welfare
Ashok Dalwai, Ritambhara Singh
Pages 1-28
Evolving Employment and Income Structure of India
Ashok Dalwai, Ritambhara Singh
Pages 29-50
Introducing Secondary Agriculture
Ashok Dalwai, Ritambhara Singh
Pages 51-66
Secondary Agriculture: Underpinned by Circular Economy and Bioeconomy
Ashok Dalwai, Ritambhara Singh
Pages 67-83
India: Status of Agro-industries and Scope for Promoting Bioeconomy
Ashok Dalwai, Ritambhara Singh
Pages 85-103
Secondary Agriculture as Complement to Primary Agriculture: Pathway to a Wholesome Agriculture
Ashok Dalwai, Ritambhara Singh
Pages 105-126
Micro-enterprises in Rural India: Fulcrum of Secondary Agriculture: Philosophy and Ecosystem
Ashok Dalwai, Ritambhara Singh
Pages 127-138
Secondary Agriculture: Farm-Linked Micro-enterprises
Ashok Dalwai, Ritambhara Singh
Pages 139-196
Farm-Linked Micro-enterprises: Entrepreneurship Promotion and Facilitation for Secondary Agriculture
Ashok Dalwai, Ritambhara Singh
Pages 197-210
Medium and Large Enterprises Under Secondary Agriculture: Challenges
Ashok Dalwai, Ritambhara Singh
Pages 211-233
Value Chain Management for Secondary Agriculture: Integrating Extension and Monetisation
Ashok Dalwai, Ritambhara Singh
Pages 235-269
Digital Technology for Fostering Secondary Agriculture
Ashok Dalwai, Ritambhara Singh
Pages 271-289
Final Words and Way Forward
Ashok Dalwai, Ritambhara Singh

A first of its kind, this authored book marshals data and logic that necessitate the agriculture sector to transcend beyond its conventional role of securing food, fodder, and feed. It examines India's growing working population and juxtaposes it with the declining labour demand in the secondary and tertiary sectors of the economy, on account of the deployment of disruptive suite of labour-substituting technologies. Therefore, the conventional developmental models that hypothesize the shifting of surplus manpower from agriculture to non-agricultural sectors may not stand the test of scrutiny in the twenty-first century. Hence, the need for remandating the agricultural sector to generate gainful jobs and supplementary incomes in an ecologically synchronous manner for sustainability.

The book draws the readers' attention to the importance of bioeconomy and circular economy. To enhance the biologically dependent cumulative agri-output, it recommends the adoption of supplementary and complementary activities. These interventions, along with processing (food and non-food), aid in minimizing food loss, enhancing value capture in favour of the farmers and other value chain stakeholders, and creating gainful jobs and linked incomes resulting in higher enterprise-profits. This progresses the agricultural sector into a bioeconomy anchored around secondary agriculture. Agri-processing being integral to secondary agriculture can be practiced at various scales beginning from micro to small to medium to large. The book highlights both the scope for such enterprises in India and the challenges they are vulnerable to. In the context of sub-par levels of jobs and income in the farm sector, the book emphasizes on micro-enterprises, and suggests the clusterization of entrepreneurs and digitalization along the value chain to achieve competitiveness. The book also deliberates on market-led production matrix, and value chain-based extension services to meet the feedstock demands of secondary agriculture.

This book is of relevance to a range of individuals and organizations concerned with agriculture. They include academics, researchers, professionals, universities, domestic & international organizations, bankers & financial institutions, FPOs, entrepreneurs, policymakers, and students.

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