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Abstract
This paper has investigated the extent of agricultural labour shortage, its implications and combating
strategies in a cold-arid eco-region of Ladakh in Jammu & Kashmir. The study has observed that the
intensity of male agricultural labour has decreased and of female labour has increased in the cold-arid
region of Ladakh, thereby, suggesting imparting of professionalism through extension trainings and other
capacity building programmes among female labourers. Regression analysis has revealed that the extent of
mechanization, literacy and income of non-agricultural workers are significant and negative determinants
of labour availability, while improvement in landholding size and land productivity would significantly
improve their supply to the farming sector. At the farm level, labour scarcity has been estimated at 27 per
cent in fodder to 70 per cent of total labour requirement in apricot. Labour shortage, especially during
critical farm activities, has negative implications on farm profitability and productivity levels. Farmers have
adopted various strategies to combat labour scarcity, but an optimum strategy seems to be still absent.
Out-migration of rural labour has been observed as a regular livelihood-security gesture in the villages.
Higher number of labour days and in turn, higher annual income has been found in the non-farm avenues.
Interaction of variables like wage rates and tourism in the Ladakh region has resulted in backward bending
of labour supply in agriculture. On the basis of findings of this study, a few policy suggestions have
emerged which include linking of production with marketing through value addition to engage labour for
most part of the year and innovation in the form of location and farm-size specific machines to combat
labour scarcity. Study has also emphasized on encouragement of micro-agricultural enterprises and labour
exchange system as a viable strategy to reduce severity of labour scarcity problem.