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Dealing with Surplus Scenario - II

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July 28, 2018

Click here for Part I

What is the issue?

Markets should develop capacity to absorb higher milk and foodgrain output.

What are the recent developments?

  • Falling producer prices of food crops and milk have emerged as a major issue over the last year.
  • The Centre has awarded increases in support prices (e.g. MSP) in the case of cereals and pulses.
  • The Maharashtra government has accepted the protesting dairy growers’ demand to buy milk at Rs.25 a litre.

What is the concern?

  • Procurement - Higher support prices sometimes lead to negative outcomes.
  • This is especially true if they are not backed up by procurement and additional demand.
  • Evidently, the total pulses procurement was over 4 million tonnes in 2017-18.
  • But this procurement amounted only to less than a fifth of pulses output.
  • So it could not arrest a fall in prices to well below the support price level.
  • Contrastingly, wheat and paddy prices for farmers are encouraging.
  • This is because, in this case, procurement accounts for a third of the output.
  • Approach - Falling producer prices is often mistaken to be a case of excess production.
  • However, this could not be relevant in all cases as malnutrition is still rampant in India.
  • Evidently, the net per capita daily availability of foodgrains (including cereals and pulses) has only now crossed the 500-gm mark.
  • For milk, the per capita daily availability of over 350 gm is just a little more than the dietary recommendation.
  • Inequality - Clearly, there are inequalities in food intake across income groups.
  • This is particularly true in the case of vegetables, fruit, milk and eggs.
  • So it is clear that the population can absorb a higher output of food, eggs and milk.
  • The real issue is thus of sorting out market limitations through a range of steps.

What could be done?

  • The procurement and public distribution system need to be strengthened and streamlined.
  • An efficient PDS -
  1. opens up additional demand
  2. addresses nutritional deficiencies
  3. helps stabilise the market by utilising a part of the produce
  • Public kitchens, which have begun in the southern States, should be promoted elsewhere.
  • States can introduce milk and its products in mid-day meals and in railway stations at cheap rates.
  • In all, Indian agriculture needs a distribution system that can cope with much higher levels of output.

 

Source: BusinessLine

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