Abstract : Agriculture has a critical bearing on the socioeconomic profile of rural India, especially in the semiarid regions, like Rajasthan. This paper investigates the complex interactions between crop economy and rural livelihoods as illustrated through a case study from Sikar district. The study is expected to entertain the peer of cropping pattern, input output cost structure, marketing accessibility and income generation potentiality, with reference to the important crops in order of area cropped, wheat, mustard, bajra and gram etc. Particular stress is given to small and marginal farmers who form the agrarian bulk and are more susceptible to climate vagaries, the inflation in the cost of inputs, and price vagaries. The primary data was generated through structured interviews and field investigation conducted in several villages of Sikar along with secondary sources like government documents, agricultural records and academic literature. The study found that while the region had made enormous progress in irrigation and mechanization, agriculture remained vulnerable because of erratic rainfall, limited institutional credit, sky-rocketing cultivation costs and poor crop insurance reach. In addition, lack of marketing facilities and the reliance on middlemen deprives the farmers of their due income. Paper also discusses other livelihood pattern adopted by the rural houses holds in the form of animal husbandry, seasonal migration, rural non-farm economy. Results demonstrate that rich income diversification, government schemes (such as PM-KISAN, MGNREGA), and agricultural extension services can contribute to reduce the vulnerability to rural livelihoods and improve sustainability. In summary, region-specific agricultural policy interventions, enhanced market linkages and better rural infrastructure are the important prerequisites to enhancing crop productivity and sustaining rural livelihoods in Sikar and other agro-climatic regions. The article also makes a humble contribution to the wider debate on agrarian reform and rural development in India with some field-level feedback and practical suggestions.. Keywords : Crop Economics, Rural Livelihoods, Sikar District, Agricultural Productivity, Small and Marginal Farmers, Income Diversification.
Gurjar et al. (Tue,) studied this question.
Synapse has enriched 5 closely related papers on similar clinical questions. Consider them for comparative context: