Chapter 4 : Agriculture in India

Agriculture – NCERT Class X | Legacy IAS

1. Introduction

India is an agriculturally important country. Two-thirds of its population is engaged in agricultural activities. Agriculture is a primary activity that produces most of the food we consume. It also produces raw material for various industries and some agricultural products like tea, coffee and spices are also exported.

📌 Key Fact Agriculture provides livelihood for more than 60% of India’s population and is the backbone of the rural economy.

2. Types of Farming

A. Primitive Subsistence Farming (Shifting Cultivation)

Practised on small patches of land using primitive tools like hoe, dao and digging sticks with family/community labour. Depends on monsoon, natural soil fertility and environment. It is a ‘slash and burn’ agriculture — farmers clear, cultivate, then shift when soil fertility declines, allowing nature to replenish it. Land productivity is low as no fertilisers or modern inputs are used.

🔵 Regional Names for Shifting Cultivation (NCERT Sidebar – Frequently Asked)
NameRegion / State
JhummingNorth-eastern states (Assam, Meghalaya, Mizoram, Nagaland) — also the general term used
PamlouManipur
DipaBastar district, Chhattisgarh and Andaman & Nicobar Islands
Bewar / DahiyaMadhya Pradesh
Podu / PendaAndhra Pradesh
Pama Dabi / Koman / BringaOdisha
KumariWestern Ghats
Valre / WaltreSouth-eastern Rajasthan
KhilHimalayan belt
KuruwaJharkhand
🌍 International Names for ‘Jhumming’ (NCERT Sidebar) Milpa (Mexico & Central America) | Conuco (Venezuela) | Roca (Brazil) | Masole (Central Africa) | Ladang (Indonesia) | Ray (Vietnam)

B. Intensive Subsistence Farming

Practised in areas of high population pressure on land. It is labour-intensive farming where high doses of biochemical inputs and irrigation are used for higher production. The ‘right of inheritance’ leads to fragmentation of land holdings, rendering them uneconomical, but farmers continue to extract maximum output due to absence of alternative livelihood.

C. Commercial Farming

Main characteristic: use of higher doses of modern inputs — HYV seeds, chemical fertilisers, insecticides and pesticides for higher productivity. Degree of commercialisation varies by region.

📌 Important Example (NCERT) Rice is a commercial crop in Haryana and Punjab, but a subsistence crop in Odisha — same crop, different economic roles by region.

D. Plantation Agriculture

A type of commercial farming where a single crop is grown on a large area. Plantations have an interface of agriculture and industry. Features: large tracts of land, capital-intensive inputs, migrant labourers; all produce used as raw material for respective industries. Requires a well-developed transport and communication network.

Important plantation crops in India: Tea, Coffee, Rubber, Sugarcane, Banana. Tea in Assam and North Bengal; Coffee in Karnataka.

🔵 Rinjha Story (NCERT Sidebar) Rinjha lived in Diphu, Assam — her family practised shifting cultivation (Jhumming). She helped irrigate fields using a bamboo canal from a nearby spring. The story illustrates the unknowing cycle of shifting cultivation as soil fertility declines each season.

3. Cropping Pattern – Three Seasons

SeasonSowing PeriodHarvesting PeriodImportant Crops
RabiOctober – December (winter)April – June (summer)Wheat, barley, peas, gram, mustard
KharifOnset of monsoonSeptember – OctoberPaddy, maize, jowar, bajra, tur (arhar), moong, urad, cotton, jute, groundnut, soyabean
ZaidBetween Rabi & Kharif (summer months)Short seasonWatermelon, muskmelon, cucumber, vegetables, fodder crops
📌 Special Notes Rabi crops in Punjab, Haryana, western UP and parts of Rajasthan benefited from the Green Revolution and western temperate cyclones (winter precipitation). Sugarcane takes almost a year to grow (not classified under any single season). In Assam, West Bengal and Odisha, three crops of paddy are grown: Aus, Aman and Boro.

4. Major Crops – Geographical Conditions and Distribution

A. Rice

India: Distribution of Rice
India: Distribution of Rice (NCERT)
FeatureDetails
Crop typeKharif crop; staple food crop of a majority of people
India’s rankSecond largest producer in the world after China
TemperatureAbove 25°C
RainfallAbove 100 cm annual; high humidity; irrigated in less-rainfall areas
Major regionsPlains of north and north-eastern India, coastal areas, deltaic regions
Major statesAssam, West Bengal, coastal Odisha, AP, Telangana, Tamil Nadu, Kerala, Maharashtra (Konkan coast), UP, Bihar. Also Punjab & Haryana (via canal irrigation and tubewells)
Three-crop statesAssam, West Bengal, Odisha → Aus, Aman, Boro

B. Wheat

India: Distribution of Wheat
India: Distribution of Wheat (NCERT)
FeatureDetails
Crop typeRabi crop; second most important cereal crop
TemperatureCool growing season; bright sunshine at ripening
Rainfall50–75 cm, evenly distributed over growing season
Two wheat zones1. Ganga-Satluj plains in north-west; 2. Black soil region of Deccan
Major statesPunjab, Haryana, Uttar Pradesh, Madhya Pradesh, Bihar, Rajasthan

C. Millets (Coarse Grains – High Nutritional Value)

MilletKey FeatureSoil / ConditionMajor States
Jowar3rd most important food crop by area & production; rain-fed; hardly needs irrigationMoist areasMaharashtra, Karnataka, AP, MP
BajraGrows well on sandy and shallow black soilSandy soilsRajasthan, UP, Maharashtra, Gujarat, Haryana
RagiRich in iron, calcium, micro-nutrients and roughage; crop of dry regionsRed, black, sandy, loamy, shallow black soilsKarnataka, Tamil Nadu, HP, Uttarakhand, Sikkim, Jharkhand, Arunachal Pradesh

D. Maize

FeatureDetails
UseBoth food and fodder
SeasonPrimarily Kharif; in Bihar also grown in Rabi season
Temperature21°C to 27°C
SoilOld alluvial soil
Major statesKarnataka, MP, UP, Bihar, AP, Telangana

E. Pulses

FeatureDetails
India’s rankLargest producer AND consumer of pulses in the world
Nutritional roleMajor source of protein in vegetarian diet
TypesTur (arhar), urad, moong, masur, peas, gram
Special propertyBeing leguminous crops, all except arhar restore soil fertility by fixing nitrogen from air → grown in rotation with other crops
Moisture needNeed less moisture; survive in dry conditions
Major statesMadhya Pradesh, Rajasthan, Maharashtra, UP, Karnataka

F. Sugarcane

FeatureDetails
TypeTropical and subtropical crop
Temperature21°C to 27°C (hot and humid climate)
Rainfall75–100 cm annual; irrigation needed in low-rainfall areas
India’s rankSecond largest producer after Brazil
ProductsSugar, gur (jaggery), khandsari and molasses
Major statesUttar Pradesh, Maharashtra, Karnataka, Tamil Nadu, AP, Telangana, Bihar, Punjab, Haryana

G. Oil Seeds

FeatureDetails
CoverageApproximately 12% of total cropped area
India’s rank (Groundnut)Second largest producer after China (2020)
TypesGroundnut, mustard, coconut, sesamum (til), soyabean, castor seeds, cotton seeds, linseed, sunflower
GroundnutKharif crop; accounts for about half of major oilseeds; Gujarat was largest producer (2019-20), followed by Rajasthan and Tamil Nadu
SesamumKharif in north; Rabi in south India
Castor seedBoth Rabi and Kharif crop
Linseed & MustardRabi crops
UseEdible/cooking medium; also raw material for soap, cosmetics, ointments

H. Tea

FeatureDetails
TypePlantation agriculture (beverage crop)
HistoryIntroduced by the British; today most plantations are owned by Indians
ClimateTropical and sub-tropical; warm, moist, frost-free; frequent, evenly distributed showers
SoilDeep, fertile, well-drained soil rich in humus and organic matter
LabourLabour-intensive; requires abundant, cheap and skilled labour; processed within the tea garden
India’s rank (2020)Second largest producer of tea after China
Major statesAssam, hills of Darjeeling & Jalpaiguri (WB), Tamil Nadu, Kerala; also HP, Uttarakhand, Meghalaya, AP, Tripura

I. Coffee

FeatureDetails
VarietyArabica variety (initially brought from Yemen) — in great demand globally
Origin in IndiaInitially cultivated on Baba Budan Hills
Current distributionConfined to Nilgiri in Karnataka, Kerala and Tamil Nadu
QualityIndian coffee known for its good quality in the world

J. Horticulture Crops

India’s rank (2020)Second largest producer of fruits and vegetables after China
MangoesMaharashtra, AP, Telangana, UP, West Bengal
OrangesNagpur and Cherrapunjee (Meghalaya)
BananasKerala, Mizoram, Maharashtra, Tamil Nadu
Lichi & GuavaUP and Bihar
PineapplesMeghalaya
GrapesAP, Telangana, Maharashtra
Apples, Pears, Apricots, WalnutsJammu & Kashmir, Himachal Pradesh
VegetablesIndia produces pea, cauliflower, onion, cabbage, tomato, brinjal, potato

Source: Pocket Book of Agricultural Statistics, 2022, Govt. of India, Directorate of Economics and Statistics.

5. Non-Food Crops

Rubber

FeatureDetails
TypeEquatorial crop; also grown in tropical and sub-tropical areas
ClimateMoist and humid; rainfall > 200 cm; temperature above 25°C
UseImportant industrial raw material
Major statesKerala, Tamil Nadu, Karnataka, Andaman & Nicobar Islands, Garo hills of Meghalaya

Fibre Crops

Four major fibre crops: Cotton, Jute, Hemp and Natural Silk. First three derived from crops; silk is obtained from cocoons of silkworms fed on mulberry leaves. Rearing of silkworms = Sericulture.

CropKey FactsMajor States
CottonIndia is believed to be original home of cotton plant; raw material for cotton textile industry; second largest producer after China; Kharif crop; requires high temperature, light rainfall or irrigation, 210 frost-free days, bright sunshine; takes 6–8 months to mature; grows in drier parts of black cotton soil of DeccanMaharashtra, Gujarat, MP, Karnataka, AP, Telangana, TN, Punjab, Haryana, UP
JuteKnown as ‘Golden Fibre’; grows on well-drained fertile soils in flood plains (soils renewed every year); high temperature required; used in making gunny bags, mats, ropes, yarn, carpetsWest Bengal, Bihar, Assam, Odisha, Meghalaya

6. Technological and Institutional Reforms

Sustained use of land without compatible techno-institutional changes has hindered agricultural development. Agriculture providing livelihood to more than 60% of population needs serious technical and institutional reforms.

Post-Independence Reforms (Chronological)

Period / InitiativeDetails
Post-IndependenceCollectivisation, consolidation of holdings, cooperation, abolition of zamindari — institutional reforms
First Five Year PlanLand reform‘ was the main focus; right of inheritance led to fragmentation → consolidation needed
1960s–1970sGreen Revolution (package technology — HYV seeds, fertilisers, irrigation) and White Revolution / Operation Flood; but led to concentration of development in few selected areas
1980s–1990sComprehensive land development programme — both institutional and technical reforms

Government Schemes for Farmers

Scheme / MeasurePurpose
Crop insuranceAgainst drought, flood, cyclone, fire and disease
Grameen Banks, cooperative societies and banksLoan facilities at lower interest rates
Kisan Credit Card (KCC)Credit facility for farmers
Personal Accident Insurance Scheme (PAIS)Insurance for farmers against accidents
Weather bulletins on radio and TVTimely agricultural advisories
Minimum Support Price (MSP)Remunerative and procurement prices to check exploitation by speculators and middlemen
📗 Bhoodan–Gramdan Movement (NCERT Sidebar – Frequently Asked) Mahatma Gandhi declared Vinoba Bhave his spiritual heir. After Gandhiji’s martyrdom, Vinoba Bhave undertook padyatra across India. At Pochampally, Telangana, poor landless villagers demanded land. Shri Ram Chandra Reddy offered 80 acres for 80 landless villagers — this act was called ‘Bhoodan’. When zamindars offered entire villages, it was called ‘Gramdan’. Some land-owners donated land due to fear of the land ceiling act. This Bhoodan-Gramdan movement is also known as the ‘Blood-less Revolution’.

7. Master Crop Reference Table (UPSC Quick Revision)

CropSeasonIndia’s World RankTemperatureRainfall (cm)Top Producers
RiceKharif2nd (after China)>25°C>100WB, UP, AP, Telangana, Assam
WheatRabiCool + bright sunshine50–75 (even)Punjab, Haryana, UP, MP, Bihar, Rajasthan
JowarKharifRain-fedMaharashtra, Karnataka, AP, MP
BajraKharifSandy soilRajasthan, UP, Maharashtra, Gujarat, Haryana
RagiKharifDry regionsDryKarnataka, TN, HP, Uttarakhand
MaizeKharif (Rabi in Bihar)21–27°COld alluvialKarnataka, MP, UP, Bihar, AP
PulsesBoth1st (producer & consumer)Low moistureMP, Rajasthan, Maharashtra, UP, Karnataka
Sugarcane~1 year2nd (after Brazil)21–27°C75–100UP, Maharashtra, Karnataka, TN
GroundnutKharif2nd (after China, 2020)Gujarat, Rajasthan, TN
TeaPlantation2nd (after China, 2020)Warm, frost-freeEvenly distributedAssam, WB, TN, Kerala
CoffeePlantationKarnataka, Kerala, TN (Nilgiri)
CottonKharif2nd (after China)High + 210 frost-free daysLight / irrigationMaharashtra, Gujarat, MP, Punjab
JuteKharifHighFlood plainsWB, Bihar, Assam, Odisha
RubberPlantation>25°C>200Kerala, TN, Karnataka

8. NCERT Exercise Answers

MCQ Answers

  1. Single crop grown on large area: (b) Plantation Agriculture
  2. Rabi crop: (b) Gram (Rice, Millets, Cotton are Kharif)
  3. Leguminous crop: (a) Pulses (fix nitrogen from air)

Wordpuzzle Answers (NCERT Activity)

ClueAnswer
Two staple food crops of IndiaRICE and WHEAT
Summer cropping season of IndiaKHARIF
Pulses like arhar, moong, gram, urad contain…PROTEIN
It is a coarse grainJOWAR
Two important beverages in IndiaTEA and COFFEE
One of the four major fibres grown on black soilsCOTTON

Institutional Reform Programmes (30-word answer)

Collectivisation, consolidation of holdings, cooperation, abolition of zamindari, crop insurance, Grameen Banks, cooperative societies, Kisan Credit Card (KCC), Personal Accident Insurance Scheme (PAIS), Minimum Support Price (MSP), weather bulletins, agricultural programmes on radio and TV.

📝 Practice MCQs – UPSC / State PCS Standard
Q1. ‘Slash and burn’ agriculture is known as ‘Milpa’ in Mexico. What is its equivalent name in Vietnam?
  • A. Ladang
  • B. Masole
  • C. Conuco
  • D. Ray
✅ Answer: D | Milpa (Mexico/Central America) | Conuco (Venezuela) | Roca (Brazil) | Masole (Central Africa) | Ladang (Indonesia) | Ray (Vietnam).
Q2. Which millet is very rich in iron, calcium, micro-nutrients and roughage?
  • A. Jowar
  • B. Bajra
  • C. Ragi
  • D. Maize
✅ Answer: C | Ragi is a crop of dry regions, rich in iron, calcium and roughage. Jowar is the third most important food crop by area and production.
Q3. India is the second largest producer of sugarcane. Which country is the largest?
  • A. China
  • B. Brazil
  • C. Thailand
  • D. USA
✅ Answer: B | India is 2nd after Brazil in sugarcane. For Rice and Tea — 2nd after China. For Groundnut — 2nd after China. For Cotton — 2nd after China.
Q4. The Arabica variety of coffee was initially brought from Yemen and its cultivation was first introduced on:
  • A. Nilgiri Hills
  • B. Baba Budan Hills
  • C. Anaimalai Hills
  • D. Cardamom Hills
✅ Answer: B | Arabica coffee from Yemen was initially cultivated on Baba Budan Hills; today confined to Nilgiri in Karnataka, Kerala and Tamil Nadu.
Q5. Which of the following pulses does NOT help in restoring soil fertility by fixing nitrogen?
  • A. Moong
  • B. Gram
  • C. Arhar (Tur)
  • D. Urad
✅ Answer: C | NCERT specifically states all leguminous pulses EXCEPT arhar (tur) help restore soil fertility by fixing nitrogen from the air.
Q6. Cotton is a Kharif crop that requires how many frost-free days for its growth?
  • A. 120 days
  • B. 150 days
  • C. 180 days
  • D. 210 days
✅ Answer: D | Cotton requires high temperature, light rainfall or irrigation, 210 frost-free days and bright sunshine. It takes 6–8 months to mature.
Q7. The Bhoodan-Gramdan movement initiated by Vinoba Bhave is also known as:
  • A. Green Revolution
  • B. White Revolution
  • C. Blood-less Revolution
  • D. Silent Revolution
✅ Answer: C | Vinoba Bhave, Gandhi’s spiritual heir, started the movement at Pochampally, Telangana. Shri Ram Chandra Reddy offered 80 acres for 80 landless farmers (Bhoodan). Villages donated = Gramdan.
Q8. Three crops of paddy grown in Assam, West Bengal and Odisha are:
  • A. Aman, Boro, Sali
  • B. Aus, Aman, Boro
  • C. Ahu, Sali, Boro
  • D. Kharif, Rabi, Zaid paddy
✅ Answer: B | As per NCERT, three crops of paddy grown per year in Assam, West Bengal and Odisha are Aus, Aman and Boro.
Q9. Jute is known as ‘Golden Fibre’. Which of the following is NOT a use of jute?
  • A. Gunny bags
  • B. Carpets
  • C. Ropes and yarn
  • D. Natural rubber products
✅ Answer: D | Jute is used in gunny bags, mats, ropes, yarn, carpets and artefacts. Natural rubber is an entirely different product from the rubber plant.
Q10. Which of the following statements about Sesamum (Til) is correct?
  • A. It is a rabi crop in both north and south India
  • B. It is a kharif crop in north India and a rabi crop in south India
  • C. It is only grown in south India as a rabi crop
  • D. It is a zaid season crop across India
✅ Answer: B | NCERT explicitly states: Sesamum is a kharif crop in north India and rabi crop in south India — an example of the same crop having different seasons by region.

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