Raw cotton in the Madras presidency
Raw Cotton in the Madras Presidency — UPSC Study Note
1. At a Glance
- Raw cotton was a premier commercial/cash crop of colonial India; its flows through the Madras Presidency reveal the structural extraction economy of the British Raj. [S1]
- The Madras Presidency was one of three principal British administrative units in India (alongside Bombay and Bengal), covering most of peninsular India — a major cotton-growing and exporting zone. [S2]
- The 1925-26 crop data show that only 250,446 bales (of 400 lb lint) were received at presses and mills against an estimated 551,400 bales — a severe shortfall of ~54.5%, signalling either a crop failure or disruption in arrivals. [S1 Article]
- UPSC relevance: This topic intersects colonial economic history (GS-I), the drain of wealth debate, early industrialisation, and the political economy of cotton leading to Gandhi's Swadeshi and Non-Cooperation movements.
2. Why in the News
- The article is a reproduction of a 100-year-old statistical bulletin (originally 1926), reprinted by The Hindu on 29 June 2026 as part of its "From the Archives" or supplement series (Page 9, International Print Edition). [S1 Article]
- Such archival reproductions draw attention to colonial economic data as primary sources for understanding India's pre-Independence agrarian and trade history.
- Static topic with archival trigger — no ongoing policy event; the trigger is a centenary archival reprint.
3. Background & Evolution
- Madras Presidency was formally constituted by the British East India Company; by 1926 it was a Province of British India under the Government of India Act, 1919 (Montagu-Chelmsford Reforms). [S2]
- Cotton cultivation in South India expanded through the 19th century as Britain's Lancashire mills demanded raw material, particularly after the American Civil War (1861–65) disrupted US cotton supply — triggering the "Cotton Famine" and permanently raising India's role. [S3]
- Cotton presses (ginning and pressing establishments) were set up across the Presidency at key railheads to compress lint into bales for export.
- By the 1920s, indigenous spinning mills (not just export presses) were increasingly receiving raw cotton — reflecting the growth of India's own textile industry and the nationalist Swadeshi impulse. [S3]
- The Indian Cotton Committee (1919) was a colonial body that studied cotton growing, classification, and trade statistics across presidencies.
- Key milestones: | Year | Event | |---|---| | 1850s–60s | Railway network expansion accelerated raw cotton evacuation from interior to ports | | 1861–65 | US Civil War → Indian cotton boom; Madras, Bombay expanded exports | | 1876–78 | Great Famine — disrupted agricultural labour and crop patterns | | 1919 | Montagu-Chelmsford Act; transferred some subjects to provincial legislatures | | 1920–22 | Non-Cooperation Movement; Swadeshi promoted Indian spinning mills | | 1925–26 | Reported shortfall in cotton arrivals (250,446 vs 551,400 bales estimated) [S1 Article] |
4. Core Static Facts
- Unit of measurement: Bales of 400 lb lint — the standard colonial bale weight for cotton. [S1 Article]
- Reporting period: 30 January to 18 June 1926 (approximately 20 weeks). [S1 Article]
- Total receipts at presses and spinning mills (1925-26, up to 18 June): 250,446 bales. [S1 Article]
- Estimated total crop (1925-26): 551,400 bales — making actual receipts ~45.4% of estimated crop. [S1 Article]
- Corresponding period previous year (1924-25): 311,321 bales — the 1925-26 figure was ~19.6% lower year-on-year. [S1 Article]
- Pressed cotton received at spinning mills: 30,642 bales (subset of total, denoting indigenous mill consumption). [S1 Article]
- Exported by sea: 123,701 bales (≈ 49.4% of reported receipts). [S1 Article]
- Imported by sea (from Karachi and Bombay): 11,730 bales — indicating cross-regional raw cotton trade within colonial India. [S1 Article]
- Implementing/monitoring body: Department of Statistics and Commerce, Madras Presidency (under the Government of India's commercial intelligence apparatus). [S2]
- Key ports: Madras (Chennai) was the primary export port; Karachi and Bombay were import sources. [S1 Article]
- Enabling framework: Indian Ports Act, Government of India Act 1919; cotton statistics compiled under Central Cotton Committee guidelines.
5. Multi-Dimensional Analysis
Economic
- The ~54.5% shortfall between estimated and received cotton (551,400 vs 250,446 bales) suggests a significant crop failure or post-harvest disruption in 1925-26, with serious revenue implications for both farmers and the colonial treasury. [S1 Article]
- Export of 123,701 bales by sea represents raw material outflow — emblematic of the drain of wealth critique (Dadabhai Naoroji, R.C. Dutt): raw cotton left India to feed British mills, while finished cloth was re-imported. [S3]
- The co-existence of exports (123,701 bales) and imports from Karachi/Bombay (11,730 bales) illustrates intra-India regional commodity flows and differential availability across presidencies.
- Growth of indigenous spinning mills (receiving 30,642 bales of pressed cotton) shows early import-substitution dynamics preceding full industrialisation. [S1 Article]
Historical
- The 1920s were marked by the Non-Cooperation Movement (1920-22) and the rise of the Indian National Congress's economic critique of colonial extraction — cotton statistics like these were cited by nationalist economists. [S3]
- The Bombay and Karachi import flows into Madras reflect the integrated colonial commodity economy where Punjab/Sindh cotton could be re-routed to southern mills.
- The year-on-year decline from 311,321 to 250,446 bales may connect to the 1925 agrarian distress in South India. [S1 Article]
Administrative
- Data was compiled centrally across presses and spinning mills — demonstrating the colonial statistical infrastructure built to monitor commercial crop flows for trade policy and revenue purposes.
- The distinction between "loose cotton at presses" and "pressed cotton at spinning mills" reflects a two-stage processing chain: ginning/pressing for export vs. further processing for domestic manufacture. [S1 Article]
Social
- Cotton cultivation was largely carried out by small tenant farmers in the black-soil tracts of the Deccan; crop shortfalls translated to indebtedness and distress, fuelling agrarian unrest and nationalist mobilisation. [S3]
- Women constituted a significant portion of cotton-picking and ginning labour — an undocumented workforce in colonial statistics.
Environmental
- Cotton is a water-intensive crop; the colonial period's expansion of cotton cultivation (especially after railways and irrigation) contributed to soil exhaustion and reduced food crop acreage, worsening famine vulnerability. [S3]
6. Recent Developments (last 12–18 months)
- June 2026: The Hindu reprinted the 1926 Madras Presidency cotton statistics as an archival feature in its International Print Edition (Page 9, 29 June 2026) — drawing scholarly and public attention to colonial commodity data as primary sources. [S1 Article]
- Static historical topic — no new policy, scheme, or legislative development directly pertaining to 1926 Madras Presidency cotton; current relevance is pedagogical/archival.
7. Prelims Hooks
- Raw cotton bales in colonial India were standardised at 400 lb (lint) per bale. [S1 Article]
- Between 30 Jan and 18 Jun 1926, the Madras Presidency received 250,446 bales of raw cotton at presses and mills. [S1 Article]
- The estimated total Madras Presidency cotton crop for 1925-26 was 551,400 bales — actual receipts were less than half. [S1 Article]
- 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]
- 123,701 bales of cotton were exported by sea from Madras Presidency (Jan–Jun 1926). [S1 Article]
- 11,730 bales were imported by sea into Madras Presidency — sourced from Karachi and Bombay. [S1 Article]
- 30,642 bales of pressed cotton were received specifically at spinning mills (not export presses), indicating indigenous textile production. [S1 Article]
- The Madras Presidency was one of three major British Indian presidencies; the others were Bombay and Bengal. [S2]
- 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]
- 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]
- Dadabhai Naoroji's Drain of Wealth theory specifically cited raw cotton exports as evidence of economic extraction from India. [S3]
- 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
- GS Paper I — Modern Indian History: Economic impact of British colonial rule; Drain of Wealth; agrarian and commercial changes under the Raj.
- GS Paper III — Indian Economy: Historical context of industrial policy; import-substitution; commodity trade.
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
- 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.
- 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.
- 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.
- 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.
- 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
- [S1 Article] "Raw cotton in the Madras Presidency" — The Hindu, Page 9, International Print Edition, 29 June 2026 (archival reprint of 1926 statistical bulletin) — https://www.thehindu.com/todays-paper/2026-06-29/th_international/articleGDPG67HMT-15136464.ece — (Tier 4)
- [S2] "Madras Presidency | historical region, India" — Encyclopædia Britannica — https://www.britannica.com/place/Madras-Presidency — (Tier 3)
- [S3] "The Age of Industrialisation" — NCERT Class X History Textbook, Chapter IV — https://ncert.nic.in/textbook/pdf/jess304.pdf — (Tier 3)