6. What is the alternative?
With fertile land, abundant water and and vast reserves of
natural gas, Bangladesh clearly has the potential to afford all its citizens a
decent livelihood. The basic obstacles to realizing this potential are social,
not technical. True, agricultural output can be increased somewhat by providing
more inputs, more credit and better extension services, and by raising prices to
give large landowners more incentive to produce. But this will not help those
who have no land on which to grow food and are too poor to buy it; in fact, such
production increases may actually result in greater hunger by accelerating the
concentration of land in fewer hands. Moreover, the inefficiencies inherent in
an inequitable social structure will continue to seriously limit the scope for
increasing production.
Social Reconstruction
What is the alternative to the needless hunger of Bangladesh's
poor majority? Only a far-reaching social reconstruction can break the
fundamental barriers to increased production and at the same time ensure that
the poor majority shares in the fruits of development. The key to such a
reconstruction is land reform. If a ceiling of 10 acres per family were
perfectly implemented and the excess land redistributed among the landless, each
family would receive less than 0.4 acre. A more drastic four-acre ceiling would
yield enough surplus to provide each landless and near landless family with a
total of 0.86 acre.1 But even if such a radical reform were
implemented, over time lands would be subdivided among children, and for one
reason or another some peasants would end up selling out to others, so that
eventually a landless group would reemerge. This suggests that land reform,
though necessary, would not alone be sufficient to overcome the roots of poverty
in Bangladesh. Access to the land is only half of the answer to the needs of the
rural poor the other half lies in the cooperative use of the land.
Cooperation in agricultural production would enable the peasants
of Bangladesh to undertake self-help development projects which remain
impossible as long as agriculture is organized on a fragmented, individual
basis. Through labor-intensive construction of irrigation facilities, drainage
canals and embankments, the peasants could collectively begin to master the
forces of nature in the face of which single individuals are powerless. As the
people of our village remarked: "One bamboo alone is weak; many bamboos lashed
together are unbreakable." The certainty that the peasants themselves would reap
the fruits of their labor, rather than the village landlords, would release
tremendous popular energy and initiative.
Western experts tend to disparage such an alternative approach
to development. The authors of the AID land study, for example, dismiss this
possibility:
It is difficult to imagine the people in the countryside (even
the landless), committed as they are by tradition to venerate individual rights
in land, being amenable to joint farming activities of any kind. Only under
circumstances in which the state was able and willing to employ extraordinary
coercive power can such joint farming cooperatives be envisaged in Bangladesh.
Therefore, for reasons that are practical rather than ideological, joint farming
cooperatives do not appear to be a viable option within a general program for
rural development.2
But are joint farming cooperatives in Bangladesh really such a
farfetched idea? Certainly no one should underestimate the difficulties involved
in such a major social transformation, but one must distinguish between
difficulties and insurmountable obstacles.
The assertion that the peasants of Bangladesh are committed by
tradition to "venerate individual rights in land" is an overstatement. Land
ownership in Bangladesh has been far from stable. After 1947, the breakup of the
zamindari system resulted in the transfer of ownership of three-fourths of the
country's land to new hands.3 It was through such transfers that many
of the landlords in Katni's vicinity acquired their extensive landholdings. The
peasants recall this with bitterness; they hardly venerate the landlords' rights
to the land.
While we were in the village, we witnessed the constant turnover
of land, the buying and selling through which small farmers are being gradually
dispossessed. Certainly, land is more than just another commodity to the
peasants of Bangladesh, for land ownership can spell the difference between
survival and starvation. But this is a question of economic security, not of
quasi-religious attitudes.
Furthermore, the notion of cooperation was far from alien to the
peasants of our village. Many small landowners worked together in informal
mutual aid groups. Five or six peasants would join together during the plowing,
transplanting or weeding of the fields or at harvest time, working one day on
one man's land, the next day on another's and so on. Mostly this was done by
middle and poor peasants, but sometimes landless friends would join the group,
being paid by whomever owned the land that was worked on a particular day. The
villagers explained, "When you work alone, time passes slowly. Working in a
group, we talk and sing and the work gets done much faster."
A transition to joint farming in Bangladesh would necessarily
pass through stages, perhaps building at first upon the existing tradition of
mutual aid groups. It would have to rely on the peasants' own initiative-it
could never be imposed upon them. Once convinced that change was possible, the
landless and small farmers could be expected to actively support land
redistribution and the growth of agricultural cooperation, for these would bring
them improved living standards and greater control over their lives and labor.
Rich landowners would probably be less than enthusiastic about
such changes, and force might be necessary to break their resistance. Coercion
and the violence of state repression, as well as the more subtle violence of
starvation, are today routine in Bangladesh. What would be "extraordinary" about
any coercion involved in a social reconstruction would not be its scale but
rather that it would be employed against the wealthy minority, instead of
against the poor majority.
Who could exercise the necessary force to bring about a basic
land reform ? Only the poor themselves, whose numbers give them strength. The
act of joining together to bring about social change would help to set the stage
for cooperation in agricultural production itself. Industry as well as
agriculture would benefit from such a social reconstruction, since those who
today are too poor to buy consumer goods would be transformed into a vast
internal market.
To suggest that the road to development in Bangladesh lies in
this direction is not to say that the "Chinese model" can or should be exactly
duplicated. The people of each country must chart their own path of development.
What the Chinese have shown is that change is not impossible and that starvation
is not inevitable. Development is a great challenge, and one which can only be
met through the mobilization of the talents and energies of the poor themselves.
It will take patience, organization and dedication. There are no magic words and
no instant solutions.
Only far reaching social reconstruction can break the
fundamental barriers to increased production and at the same time insure that
the poor majority shares in the fruits of development. The key to such a
reconstruction is land reform.
Too Optimistic?
Some might argue that this scenario is too optimistic. A World
Bank staff member told us, "The poor people I knew would not be able to mobilize
themselves for development or revolution. In Latin America maybe, but the poor
in Bangladesh are too submissive and ignorant. "
Privately, however, many aid officials view a far-reaching
social reconstruction in Bangladesh not as a wishful dream but rather as a sad
inevitability. AID's Dacca mission states in a 1978 memorandum: "More
pessimistically, we foresee that the time will come when the organization of
productive forces will have to be radically transformed in such a fashion that
rural people will only be able to find security, employment and income in some
form of communal agriculture."4
Are Bangladesh's peasants too "submissive and ignorant" to see
the need for change? Bangladesh has a long history of peasant
rebellions.5 In 1947 and 1971 the peasants saw that political power
can and does change hands. But to struggle against the rural elite is to invite
retaliation. The large landowners are backed when necessary by the force of
arms. Peasants are not by nature passive; on the contrary, they are among the
most energetic, hardworking people in the world. The problem lies not in their
ability to act, but in the powerful forces that prevent them from acting.
The rural elite which rules the countryside is not the only
obstacle to change. The urban elite which controls the government also benefits
from the present social order and wishes to preserve it. Moreover, in Bangladesh
most members of the urban upper and middle classes are first or second
generation city dwellers with roots still in the villages. The urban and rural
elites are not only natural allies, they are also blood relations. Government
patronage to the large landowners, in the form of subsidized inputs, credit and
funds for local public works projects, serves to strengthen this alliance. The
cross fertilization of the two elites has recently taken a new twist, as
reported by The Washington Post: "Many of the land transfers recently recorded
are to army officers, senior bureaucrats and police."6
There is no natural barrier to the satisfaction of the basic
human needs of Bangladesh's people. But there is the man-made barrier of a
social order which benefits a few at the expense of many. In the cautious
language of an AID report, "A local government may lack the political will to
implement needed agrarian reforms, however obvious the need for such
reforms."7 No such shortage of political will however is likely to
handicap the government when it comes to crushing any challenge to the vested
interests it protects.
Just as Bangladesh's large landowners rely on the backing of the
elite-based government, so the government relies on financial and logistical
support from wealthier countries. Each year the United States government and
U.S.-supported multilateral institutions provide hundreds of millions of dollars
of foreign aid to the Bangladesh government. If we as Americans are concerned
about the needless hunger of Bangladesh's poor majority, our first duty is to
understand the effects of the aid given in our
name.