รัฐบัญญัติการเกษตรอินเดีย พ.ศ. 2563 (Thai Wikipedia)

Analysis of information sources in references of the Wikipedia article "รัฐบัญญัติการเกษตรอินเดีย พ.ศ. 2563" in Thai language version.

refsWebsite
Global rank Thai rank
79th place
327th place
1,507th place
low place
20th place
23rd place
52nd place
534th place
5th place
17th place
2,141st place
low place
390th place
5,663rd place
71st place
1,121st place
49th place
87th place
129th place
520th place
94th place
2,087th place
2,124th place
low place
28th place
75th place

aajtak.in (Global: 2,124th place; Thai: low place)

apnews.com (Global: 129th place; Thai: 520th place)

bbc.com (Global: 20th place; Thai: 23rd place)

  • "Farm bills: Are India's new reforms a 'death warrant' for farmers?". BBC News (ภาษาอังกฤษแบบบริติช). 23 September 2021. สืบค้นเมื่อ 27 January 2021.

cnn.com (Global: 28th place; Thai: 75th place)

hindustantimes.com (Global: 71st place; Thai: 1,121st place)

indiatoday.in (Global: 94th place; Thai: 2,087th place)

livemint.com (Global: 390th place; Thai: 5,663rd place)

pib.gov.in (Global: 2,141st place; Thai: low place)

reuters.com (Global: 49th place; Thai: 87th place)

thehindu.com (Global: 52nd place; Thai: 534th place)

thewire.in (Global: 1,507th place; Thai: low place)

worldcat.org (Global: 5th place; Thai: 17th place)

search.worldcat.org

wsj.com (Global: 79th place; Thai: 327th place)

  • Spindle, Bill; Agarwal, Vibhuti (2020-10-13). "India Turns to Economic Overhaul as Growth Prospects Slide Amid Coronavirus - Prime Minister Narendra Modi's party pushes through changes to farming and labor regulations". The Wall Street Journal. In a single swoop, it dismantled a longstanding regulatory system that forced farmers to sell most of their crops through government-approved wholesale markets dominated by traders and middlemen instead of directly to consumers or food processors. The new laws, for example, allow for the first time for many crops to be stored and sold later, eliminating restrictions that contributed to the spoilage of as much as one-third of some crops. ... Government-approved wholesale markets have largely shut or slowed sales as the traders and middlemen who dominate them protest against the prospect of new competition. Small farmers, who suddenly have no place to sell their products until other buyers step up, have also erupted in protest. They fear the government will eventually phase out a system of guaranteed price floors for some crops, leaving them little leverage in dealing directly with large-scale buyers.
  • Li, Shan; Roy, Rajesh (2021-11-20). "India to Repeal Farming Laws Protested by Tens of Thousands - Farmers who opposed rules worried they would herald end to regulations, subsidies and support". Wall Street Journal. The laws sought to dismantle a longstanding regulatory system that required farmers to sell most of their crops through government-approved wholesale markets dominated by traders and middlemen, paving the way for them to sell their produce directly to consumers or food-processing companies. Almost half of India’s 1.3 billion population relies on agriculture to earn a living, though farming accounts for less than one-fifth of India’s gross domestic product. ... Farmers ... said they were worried that the laws would make them vulnerable to big competitors and take apart a system of regulations, subsidies and support that they had relied on to bolster their meager incomes.