Report on Trade in the Baroda State
1902 GENERAL SUGGESTIONS. ______
1. Trade throughout the Raj is in a state of depression and decline. The great industries that once flourished, such as weaving, dyeing, sharafi &c. are entirely broken and though a number of small retail trades have
2. To combat these evils there are certain general measures which are essential, as without
3. Wherever such goods are produced locally as for their combined excellence and cheapness may properly be used by the
Page – 725 produced outside, the local artisans ought with proper encouragement from the Revenue authorities to be able to make up the deficiency. But such improvement is impossible if Government instantly withdraws its custom. 4. The State should make inquiries on a large scale for Improvement of local production.
(a) means of improving local production to the European standard; (b) means of improving country hand-machines. Weaving, for instance, was once a great and famous industry in every division of the Raj. A Committee should be appointed to find out in each place where the most excellent hand-woven cloths used to be made, the real causes of decline and to discover and apply measures by which they may compete successfully with European cloths. This would not be so difficult a matter as it appears at least with regard to several woven and dyed cloths. These are inferior to European in appearance and fineness but superior in strength and durability. It ought not to be impossible to supply the missing qualities. Much may be done by experiments under sub-head (b), and such are very necessary as European machinery is too costly to be introduced on the scale required. Similarly with regard to dyeing attempts should be made to discover pucca country dyes and improve such as are already in use.
5. Besides this the State should push forward the same object by Means of encouraging industrial expansion. (a) help and inducements. (b) patronage. (c) spread of knowledge. Page – 726 6. The help may come in the shape of tasalmat. This should especially be given where enterprising traders have started work of an
7. Help may also be given in the shape of machinery, which should be given at cost price to workers in articles which can be
8. Often only polish is required, or better implements, to bring country goods up to the proper standard. In these cases
9. Those who first manufacture locally from material which is at present exported raw should have their work made easy for them
10. Inducement should be held out to
(a) those who bring up country goods to the European Standard; (b) those who bring such improved commodities into the market. Page – 727 This inducement should take the shape of grants (bucksheesh, inams) or of a poshak given in durbar.
11. The State should patronize all country commodities thus improved to an European standard in preference to European
Lists should be prepared from each khata of the articles in use there and over against each item, details should be entered as to whether, how far, and where they are prepared in the State, along with the price, quality and other necessary particulars. With these lists as a basis, there should be a stringent rule enforced on all departments that wherever country goods equal or even a little inferior to European can be had, European goods should be eschewed in their favour. Artisans who can work up to the European level, besides receiving costly Inams, should be favoured with the State custom, half the price being advanced as tasalmat.
12. In order to spread knowledge the State should adopt the following methods.
This will encourage the manufacture of raw material which is at present exported and brought back as manufacture to be sold at heavy prices. There are many who would undertake such enterprises if they only had the information described.
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An exhibition of specimens of the best European work should be held in different places, having regard to the articles that are there produced, and the artisans should be allowed to take the specimens home with a view to reproduction. In addition a triennial exhibition should be held in each great Kasba, a grant of Rs. 1500 to 3000 per division being sanctioned for the purpose, where the work of different localities, etc., may be collected.
13. The abandonment of ancestral trades is mainly due to the attractions of service and the failure of the old trades owing to the
14. With regard to contracts the following rules should be made and strictly enforced.
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15. The main hindrances to expansion of trade are
16. Technical and agricultural education are both imperatively required; in many talukas it is impossible to make even a beginning
17. A technical school should be established in each division and over and above this in each Kasba where a sufficient number of boys
Page – 730 Some boys from each division should be taught at the Kalabhavan at State expense and Kalabhavan students who start factories should be helped by Government loans. From each mahal some boys should be taught at Government expense at Baroda or the Victoria Technical Institute, the money being recovered by instalments from their monthly earnings.
18. Students should also be sent to foreign parts for technical instruction; but their line should be rigidly fixed from the beginning and they should first receive what book knowledge and practical knowledge is possible and then, if necessary, be sent to a foreign workshop to complete their instruction. It is equally useless to send raw and uninstructed youths and to send students to acquire theoretical knowledge merely. They should be sent only for work in which factories are likely to be opened and for knowledge about the discovery and working of metals.
19. Except in backward parts and among very ignorant people, the subjects of the Raj almost everywhere express their willingness to send their children to Europe or elsewhere for technical and agricultural instruction. Parents are often unwilling to send boys to the Kalabhavan because they have no clear idea what will be taught to them. The Revenue officials ought to be able easily to remove this difficulty.
20. The question of duties is a difficult one; complaints come from every Prant and from every mahal and from officials and non-
Page – 731 21. The Commission makes the following recommendations.
22. The difficulty of procuring capital for industrial enterprise or agricultural improvement is reported from every taluka and it is a
Page – 732 bank should keep deposits and lend money to any one at low rates (proper security being taken), the rate of interest given on the former being a little higher than that taken for the latter.
23. In every division and every mahal the means of communication are deplorably insufficient: a great number of railways, roads,
24. Some measures should be taken to encourage indigenous medicine. The following are suggested.
Page – 733 25. A trade in the horn, bone, skin, hair and fat of animals might be established in every taluka. At
Agriculture.
26. The main features of agricultural decline are,
27. The deterioration of the quality of the soil is very marked and arises from the vighoti assessment. The circumstances of the
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27.1 With regard to the deterioration of the soil a committee of expert and practical men should be appointed to inquire
28. The most obvious means of enriching the soil are irrigation and ring. Wherever there are no talavs, wells, nehers or rivers,
1 This number is repeated in the original report. -Ed. Page – 735
29. An universal complaint comes from every taluka against the working of the tagavi rules; it is . stated that these are not carried
30. It appears that in several Talukas the people are not allowed to collect manure and in others the material for manure is
31. From every division and every Taluka there is reported deterioration in the quality of the cattle,
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32. The increasing scarcity and cost of cattle has resulted in an increasing dearness of ghee which calls imperatively for the
33. Along with deterioration there is a great increase of cattle diseases; for this there is no sufficient provision. There should be
34. Agricultural instruction should be imparted by the following methods: -
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35. If model farms have not had any notable success in the State it is because they have not been carried out under the right
36. Means of procuring capital easily and at easy rates, are, as has been said, the first condition of
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37. Complaints of lands being too heavily assessed come from different quarters. It cannot be . said how far these are true, but it
38. Agricultural expansion depends partly on the cultivation of uncultivated land and partly on the growth of new crops. Where
39. In pushing on the introduction of new crops the following considerations must be kept in view.
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40. As in many places there is a want of vegetables, an attempt should be made to introduce the growth of potatoes in each division, the State selling the seed. The introduction of Italian potatoes and bhoymug might be successfully carried out, but the experiment is too costly for any one except the Sarkar, unless special facilities in the nature of patents, &c. are given.
GENERAL .
41. A special officer should be appointed to watch over agricultural improvement, as the continual
42. Subas, Naib Subas and Vahivatdars should be asked to send in with their collections an account of the state of the people,
43. Copies of the Commission's Report should be printed and circulated
Note. -The Commission has a suggestion that for articles over which Government has to spend thousands and lakhs of Rupees, it
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