Introduction.- Part 1: Agriculture-Industry-Services Linkages.- Chapter 1: Post-harvest Food Management, Extent of Processing and Production Linkages.- Chapter 2: Output and Employment Linkages of Agriculture – Industry – Services in Indian Economy: A Computable General Equilibrium Analysis.- Chapter 3: Forging Agriculture-Industry linkages through Farmers Producers Organisations.- Chapter 4: Forging Linkages for promoting Agriculture Exports through Contract Farming.- Part 2: Employment and Productivity Growth.- Chapter 5: Temporal and Spatial Patterns in Employment and Productivity Growth in Organised Food-Beverage Industry.- Chapter 6: Productivity and Efficiency in Unorganised Food Manufacturing.- Chapter 7: Dynamics of Competition in Agro-industry in India: A Mobility Analysis.- Chapter 8: Labour Market Regulations, Flexibility and Implications for Employment Growth in Agro Processing.- Chapter 9: Beyond the Polemics: Subcontracting in Unorganised Food Manufacturing in India.- Part 3: External Trade, Competitiveness and Determinants.- Chapter 10: India’s Trade in Agro-Processed Products: Revealed Comparative Advantage and its Determinants.- Chapter 11: Trade Competitiveness of India’s Dairy Industry: An Empirical Analysis.- Chapter 12: Protection Structure and Comparative Advantage in Primary and Processed Agriculture Commodities.- Chapter 13: Agri-food Sector Competitiveness and Impact on Total Factor Productivity Growth in Organised Food Manufacturing.- Chapter 14: Productivity and Export Performance of Firms in Food Processing.- Chapter 15: Import Content, Value Added and Employment generated in India’s Exports: An Input-Output Based Analysis.
Seema Bathla is Professor, Centre for Study of Regional Development, Jawaharlal Nehru University (JNU), New Delhi. Before joining JNU, she worked in the Institute of Economic Growth (IEG), The Energy Research Institute (TERI) and Delhi University, all premium research institutions of India. She obtained her M.Phil. from Delhi School of Economics and Ph.D. from JNU. She has published six books (five co-authored) and more than 60 research articles in refereed national and international journals. Having keen interest in agricultural issues she has carried out several research studies and undertaken assignments for the World Bank, IFPRI, UNCTAD, WWF-India and IASRI. She was conferred Jawaharlal Nehru Award for Outstanding Post-Graduate Agricultural Research by the Indian Council of Agriculture Research, New Delhi in 2008. She is also the recipient of Dr. R.T.Doshi award for best paper published in Agricultural Economics Research Review in 2014 and 2015 and the 2018 Dr. S.R. Sen Biennial Award given by Indian Society of Agricultural Economics for her book on trade liberalization and Indian agriculture.
Dr. Elumalai Kannan is Associate Professor at the Centre for the Study of Regional Development (CSRD), Jawaharlal Nehru University, New Delhi. He obtained his Ph.D. in Economics from Jawaharlal Nehru University (JNU), New Delhi. He has worked at various reputed organisations such as the National Centre for Agricultural Economics and Policy Research (NCAEPR), New Delhi, International Maize and Wheat Improvement Centre (CIMMYT), New Delhi office, National Council of Applied Economic Research (NCAER), Madras School of Economics, Chennai and Institute for Social and Economic Change (ISEC), Bangalore. He was a visiting scholar at the University of Saskatchewan, Canada. Dr. Kannan has undertaken important research studies on inclusive agricultural growth, stagnation in productivity of important crops in India, agrarian change and farm sector distress, pre and post-harvest losses, contract farming and impact evaluation of agricultural development programmes. He has published several research papers in various reputed journals and contributed to edited volumes on different themes.
This book provides different facets of agro and food processing industry in both organised and unorganised segments and brings forth the topical ones, each having potential to accelerate the pace of growth in employment, productivity and exports-imports in a free trade regime. Using computable general equilibrium model, input output tables and advanced econometric tools, it brings new evidences on the inter-sectoral (agriculture-industry-services) linkages, and inferences to be competitive in both primary and processed food exports.
India is increasingly striving to improve productivity and competitiveness in agriculture and manufacturing sectors. Taking advantage of the growing per capita income, urbanisation, changing food habits of the people and exports, a concerted policy focus has been to boost private investment in food processing, largely viewed as a sunrise industry. Higher investments and productivity growth in it are expected to contribute to large scale job creation and external trade not only in the manufacturing but also in the agricultural sector.
Keeping this in mind, considerable insights are featured in the book at the industry and firm levels due to a significant bearing of technological, tariffs and non-tariff barriers on their trade intensity, productivity and efficiency. Containing perspectives from the top agro-economists in the country, the book will be very useful to researchers, trade analysts, academicians and policy makers.