Abstract

This paper analyses the situation of cardamom planters and plantations against the backdrop of COVID-19 pandemic and lack of migrant labor during the harvesting season. The global pandemic resulted in large scale exodus of migrant labor across India. For more than a decade, the cardamom plantations in high ranges of Kerala depended on large-scale migrant labor force for weeding, manual irrigation, spraying of pesticides and fertilizers, and handpicking cardamom cloves. As the cultivation of cardamom is highly labor intensive, the scarcity of labor force resulted in large scale decay of unplucked cardamom cloves in various plantations. The shortage of labor force also resulted in a drastic increase in labor cost for hand picking of cardamom cloves from the plants. The cardamom is harvested around four times a year, but the initial harvest during the ongoing pandemic witnessed a fall in the price. This study focuses on unstructured interviews and conversations with large scale and small-scale planters, labourers, cardamom traders and people employed in commercial large scale drying of cardamom. The findings suggest that many cultivators organized various strategies to overcome the migrant labor crisis such as employing unskilled labourers at a high cost, bringing migrant labourers from their hometowns in private buses at the expense of cultivators. The migrant labor crisis also provided an employment opportunity for many people who lost their livelihood during the lockdown. The attempt here is to look at the larger transformation from below and contextualize the local transformations in the larger economic milieu.

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