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17/03/2022 - Government Policies

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March 17, 2022

The Centre must look to transition urea to a Direct Benefit Transfer regime that reimburses small farmers for their actual fertiliser use. Explain (200 Words)

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IAS Parliament 2 years

KEY POINTS

·        The Centre’s move to usher in a ‘One Nation One Fertiliser’ regime, wherein all fertiliser manufacturers will be required to sell their products under a single ‘Bharat’ brand, appears not well thought through just as it will also be tough to implement.

·        With almost every aspect of fertiliser manufacturing controlled by the government, the sector already has very few private players who have survived the vicissitudes of whimsical policy-making.

·        Under the New Investment Policy 2012, urea units can be set up with the government providing subsidy support to manufacturers based on production costs plus a 12 per cent assured return on equity.

·        With selling prices capped and every aspect of operations  from product pricing to cost structure to geographical distribution and sales micromanaged by the government, urea manufacturing is already a highly unattractive business for any profit-oriented player to be in.

·        For the Centre to reap material savings in its subsidy bill, a far simpler solution exists. It can deliver the subsidy directly to farmers, decontrol urea, and leave the pricing to market forces.

·        With Direct Benefit Transfers now established as a workable way to deliver leakage-proof subsidies to targeted beneficiaries, the Centre must look to transition urea to a DBT regime that reimburses small farmers for their actual fertiliser use.

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