Raw cotton in the Madras presidency


Raw Cotton in the Madras Presidency — UPSC Study Note


1. At a Glance


2. Why in the News


3. Background & Evolution


4. Core Static Facts


5. Multi-Dimensional Analysis

Economic

Historical

Administrative

Social

Environmental


6. Recent Developments (last 12–18 months)


7. Prelims Hooks

  1. Raw cotton bales in colonial India were standardised at 400 lb (lint) per bale. [S1 Article]
  2. Between 30 Jan and 18 Jun 1926, the Madras Presidency received 250,446 bales of raw cotton at presses and mills. [S1 Article]
  3. The estimated total Madras Presidency cotton crop for 1925-26 was 551,400 bales — actual receipts were less than half. [S1 Article]
  4. In the same period of 1924-25, receipts stood at 311,321 bales — the 1925-26 season saw a ~19.6% year-on-year decline in arrivals. [S1 Article]
  5. 123,701 bales of cotton were exported by sea from Madras Presidency (Jan–Jun 1926). [S1 Article]
  6. 11,730 bales were imported by sea into Madras Presidency — sourced from Karachi and Bombay. [S1 Article]
  7. 30,642 bales of pressed cotton were received specifically at spinning mills (not export presses), indicating indigenous textile production. [S1 Article]
  8. The Madras Presidency was one of three major British Indian presidencies; the others were Bombay and Bengal. [S2]
  9. The expansion of India's raw cotton exports to Britain was dramatically accelerated by the American Civil War (1861–65), which cut off US cotton supply to Lancashire. [S3]
  10. The Montagu-Chelmsford Reforms (Government of India Act, 1919) introduced dyarchy in provinces including Madras, devolving some powers to Indian legislators — the context of the 1926 cotton data. [S2]
  11. Dadabhai Naoroji's Drain of Wealth theory specifically cited raw cotton exports as evidence of economic extraction from India. [S3]
  12. Cotton presses were typically located at railway junctions — the colonial rail network was built partly to evacuate raw material from the interior to seaports. [S3]

8. Mains Relevance

Syllabus headings: - "Economic impact of British colonial rule" - "18th-century India — decline of handicrafts; commercialisation of agriculture"

Plausible Mains Question Stems: 1. "Analyse how the colonial administration's commercial agriculture policy in the Madras Presidency contributed to the 'drain of wealth.' Use primary statistical evidence to support your argument." (GS-I, 15 marks) 2. "The coexistence of raw cotton exports and cotton imports within colonial India reflects structural distortions in the colonial economy. Examine with reference to the Madras Presidency in the 1920s." (GS-I/GS-III, 15 marks) 3. "How did the growth of indigenous spinning mills in the early 20th century challenge the colonial raw-material extraction model? Discuss with reference to South India." (GS-I, 10 marks)


9. Related Topics to Study Next

Topic Why Connected
Drain of Wealth Theory (Naoroji, R.C. Dutt) Core economic critique of which raw cotton export was a key exhibit
Commercialisation of Agriculture in Colonial India Cotton was a cash crop replacing food crops; same policy framework
Swadeshi Movement and Boycott of British Goods Cotton/textile boycott was central; spinning mills were Swadeshi instruments
Indian Famine and Agrarian Distress (1876-78, 1899-1900) Cotton-growing regions faced worst famines; cash-crop monoculture link
Bombay Presidency's Cotton Economy Parallel data; Bombay was the premier cotton-exporting presidency
Indian Factory Acts and Labour in Textile Mills Domestic spinning mills receiving bales = factory labour conditions
Railways and Colonial Economic Policy Rail infrastructure built to extract raw cotton from interior to ports
Government of India Act 1919 (Montagu-Chelmsford) Administrative context of the 1925-26 data; dyarchy and commercial policy

10. Common Errors / Trap Areas

  1. Confusing bale weight standards: The 1926 data uses 400 lb per bale; modern Indian cotton bales use different weights (170 kg ≈ 375 lb under BIS standards). Do not conflate.
  2. Assuming all cotton received = exported: Of 250,446 bales received, only 123,701 were exported — 30,642 went to spinning mills domestically. The balance was held at presses or in transit. Aspirants often assume raw cotton was entirely exported.
  3. Madras Presidency ≠ modern Tamil Nadu: The 1926 Madras Presidency included present-day Tamil Nadu, Andhra Pradesh, Kerala (Malabar), Karnataka (Bellary/Coorg), and Odisha (Ganjam). Do not equate with the post-1956 state.
  4. Karachi as a Pakistani city (post-1947 mental map): In 1926, Karachi was part of Bombay Presidency, not a separate entity. Cotton imported from Karachi was intra-India trade. Aspirants trained on post-Partition geography often err here.
  5. Conflating "presses" and "spinning mills": Cotton presses ginned and compressed lint for export; spinning mills converted lint into yarn for domestic manufacture. The 1926 data carefully distinguishes these — confusing them misreads the industrialisation-vs-extraction dynamic.

11. Sources