Asia | No business like sow business

The world’s next food superpower

Farming in India should be about profits and productivity, not poverty

An elderly farmer walking in a village in Araku, India
Photograph: PICXY
|ARAKU VALLEY, ANDHRA PRADESH

FOR YEARS the Araku Valley, deep in the mountains on India’s east coast, was mired in poverty and rocked by Maoist violence. The government classifies most of its inhabitants as “particularly vulnerable tribal groups”; for generations they relied on slash-and-burn farming to scrape by. But now locals grow high-grade coffee that is sold at high prices to posh Europeans. Araku Coffee, the company that processes and markets their berries, runs cafés in fancy bits of Bangalore, Mumbai and Paris. The valley’s transformation is an agricultural success story. It is also a glimpse of what—with the right policies—the rest of rural India might achieve.

Explore more

This article appeared in the Asia section of the print edition under the headline “No business like sow business”

From the July 13th 2024 edition

Discover stories from this section and more in the list of contents

Explore the edition

More from Asia

Illustration of a speech bubble featuring the South Korean flag, teared in two with the Taegeuk symbol (red and blue circle) split. Two men in suits stand on opposite sides.

By resisting arrest, South Korea’s president challenges democracy

His attempt to impose martial law failed. But Yoon Suk Yeol is still causing trouble

A woman is crosses a dried up lake at Boklung near Kathiatoli in Nagaon District, Assam, India

How 1.4bn Indians are adapting to climate change

As heat, floods and drought get worse, people are getting creative


A worker performs a safety inspection on a vehicle.

Economic bright spots are getting harder to find in Thailand

Falling car production is a sign of a deeper malaise


Another accidental aircraft shootdown is a matter of when, not if

The spread of conflict in Asia threatens the safety of air travellers

Why you’re not on holiday in India right now

A fabulous destination for foreign tourists does little to lure them

Singapore’s government is determined to keep hawker centres alive

Why is the city-state’s bare-bones government running a bureaucracy of stir-fries?