Showing posts with label food stocks. Show all posts
Showing posts with label food stocks. Show all posts

Tuesday, August 4, 2020

A new battery of middlemen in agriculture

Pic courtesy: Indian Express

There is excitement in the air. Soon after the three ordinances were announced in what the Agriculture Minister Narendra Singh Tomar termed as a “historic day for agriculture” a section of the mainline media was filled with a sense of elation. Now farmers can finally breathe, screamed a headline. Hailing the long-pending agrarian reforms, another newspaper blared out that the freedom to farmer to sell to anyone, anywhere, has finally freed them from the clutches of mandis. 

There is a sense of jubilation over the Central Government’s decision to finally bite the bullet, free farmers from the grasp of middlemen, who as most of the city bred believe have willy-nilly been short changing the farmers. The dhoti-kurtaclad trader, not very literate, but a very smart player in his day-to-day dealings, has often been portrayed as a side villain in Bollywood films. Not only films, even the textbooks have painted him as a villain of the growth story. This is the image that has stayed with us. It remains embedded in our thinking. 

Call him Arhtiya, Sahukar or a middleman; he is often dressed up in a dhoti-kurta or a kurta-pyajama. He also at times doubles up as a moneylender. Although the Webster dictionary describes middleman as a dealer between the producer and the consumer, the average perception is in the negative, painting him more like an evil character. This is far from true. Perhaps a closer to an objective definition has been offered by an Agritech consultant and blogger Venky Ramachandran: “Middlemen offer hyper-local infrastructure to farmers to help them avail timely credit and inputs based on their contextual relationship-driven understanding of farmers’ cropping cycles.”In fact, the relationship goes much beyond providing credit and inputs but also extends to procuring the marketable surplus, and often comes as a much needed respite at times of family emergencies. 

Nevertheless, while the educated despise the traditionally dressed middleman, they have no such qualms about a middleman who comes dressed in a tie and suit. What has the dress sense to do with the liking and disliking for the role a middleman plays is something for the psychologists to find out, but perhaps showing contempt for the local arhtiya comes in handy to replace the existing breed. Many glib talkers, highly educated, who write or call to seek advice on how they intend to bridge the gap between a farmer and consumer by squeezing out the middleman never return back when told what they plan to do is nothing different.   

To illustrate, a Start-Up using digital technology to market agri-inputs is for all practical purposes a middleman. The fact that they use technology and often have app based technological solutions, but in the end they may be a little different from a retailer, but are primarily trying to sell agri-inputs to farmers at a commission. Most of those who use the weather-based advisory to market specific pesticides and fertilisers to meet the timely needs are no different. In any case, whatever algorithms the Start-Ups may be using, and this can be true for big retailers or small enterprises, in the end the effort is to reduce the margins and increase profits. 

Then there is this category of Start-Ups whose claim to fame is to serve as an intermediary in the “farm to fork” supply chains. Most of them work in the vegetable and horticulture supply chains, with direct delivery of fresh fruits and vegetables to consumers. At best these intermediaries can be called as the new battery of middlemen, replacing the humble street vendor and the neighbourhood retail vegetable shopwala. Only time will tell how much benefit farmers receive by way of higher prices that Farmer Producer Organisations (FPOs) promise, and whether they will be able to ensure Minimum Support Price (MSP) to farmers. We know of two FPOs in Maharashtra, which purchased gram from farmers at MSP, and have run into losses.   

While there is no denying that the objective behind setting up Start-Ups and FPOs is laudable, claiming to bring in new technology in agriculture, the challenge remains on how to provide a higher price. Take the case of moong. The MSP for moong for the 2020-21 marketing season is Rs 7,196 per quintal. The average market price in Madhya Pradesh markets have hovered around Rs 4,000 to Rs 4,500 per quintal. Any price above Rs 4,500 will be called a higher price. But will the new battery of middlemen be able to ensure that moong farmers are paid as per the MSP? If not, then why blame the arhtiyasitting in the mandi.   

The excitement over the freedom to sell to anyone, anywhere, also seems to be over hyped. If MSP is coming in the way of a better price discovery, the 70th Round of National Sample Survey Office (NSSO) had shown that between July 2012 and June 2013, majority of crop harvests, except for sugarcane, was sold to local private trader and a small proportion to the government agency/cooperative. For instance, 79 per cent of moong in the rabi 2013 marketing season was sold to private traders, 18 per cent in the mandi, and only 3 per cent to government agency. Similarly for paddy, 64 per cent was sold to private traders, and only 17 per cent in the mandi, and 6 per cent to government agency. Did the private trade generally offer them higher price? No. 

If bulk of marketing was happening with private trade and that too outside the mandi, as the NSSO report shows, it means the freedom to sell to anyone, anywhere, already existed. In any case, as I have repeatedly said, only 6 per cent farmers get the benefit of MSP, the remaining 94 per cent remain dependent on markets. The question therefore is not whether a farmer sells to the arhtiya or to the new battery of middlemen, that’s not true freedom. The biggest ticket reforms would be when farmers get the freedom to sell to anyone, anywhere, at a price not below MSP. #

Ensure farmers get paid for produce as per MSP. The Tribune. July 31, 2020  https://www.tribuneindia.com/news/comment/ensure-farmers-get-paid-for-produce-as-per-msp-120152?fbclid=IwAR3gDfA6ilDNbEQ9M7QG8PQ71oHt-UvQCKGYD7TL1sZqUUWdGthRAf1fXNY

 


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Thursday, March 19, 2020

No need to panic; India has enough food stocks to tide over Corona Virus crisis


People throng to malls in panic to stock essential items in wake of coronavirus outbreak. 
Pic: socialnews.xyz

As European Union sealed its borders in a desperate attempt to put the brakes on the ferocious spread of the corona virus pandemic, a young Indian student returning from Italy recounted how the battle for a loaf of bread has intensified in a country which is perhaps the worst hit by the spread of the deadly virus. An Indian NRI couple returning to America a few days ago, after spending two months of holidays in India, were shocked to find that the price of wheat atta they usually would buy for $ 10 a bag has now skyrocketed to $ 90.

As hordes of worried shoppers have been stockpiling supplies of food, toilet paper and other groceries day after day amidst corona virus scare in America, the US President Donald Trump had to step in to assure people that there is no shortage of food supplies and urged them to resist from panic buying. 

In India, while Prime Minister Narendra Modi has urged the people not to resort to panic buying the Supreme Court directs all states to ensure that the disbursement of nutritional food to children and lactating mother is not affected as a result of the closure of schools, Kerala has launched a programme for delivering mid-day ration to school children at their homes. Meanwhile, reports of consumers stocking food and other essential items in panic have poured in from across the country. With Punjab closing down the weekly vegetable market called Apni mandi, and with some experts pointing to community transmission of corona virus expected to happen, which means self-quarantine will become the norm in the days to come, the scramble for buying and storing essential food commodities has only heightened. My own neighbours have already stocked their monthly household requirement of wheat atta, rice, sugar, edible oil, onion and potato.

Although there is no shortage of food globally as well as nationally, panic buying of food items at a time of crisis is nothing unusual. As far as wheat, rice, sugar and pulses are concerned, there are enough stocks available within the country. In fact, for wheat and rice, the godowns are already overflowing with the surplus over the required emergency buffer being several times more. Against the requirement of 214 lakh-tonnes of wheat and rice at the beginning of the year on Jan 1, 2020, Food Corporation of India (FCI) had 565.11-lakh tonnes, which means roughly two and a half times more than the essential requirement for public distribution. With the new wheat arrivals expected from the first week of April, India has certainly nothing to worry on the foodgrain front. In addition, India already has a buffer stock of 30-lakh tonnes of sugar, which the government is planning to raise to 40-lakh tonnes this fiscal. In the cases of pulses, the Ministry of Food and Consumer Affairs has been trying since December to offload 8.47-lakh tonnes from its buffer stock of pulses.

The abundance of food stocks within the country at a time when national borders are closing for movement of people and also expected to hit international trade is certainly a big sigh of relief. This reminds me of the global food crisis in 2007 when food prices had soared globally, and food riots had erupted in 37 countries, including countries like Egypt. While people went hungry, food companies had raked in huge profits with the food commodity prices soaring in the Chicago Mercantile Exchange, the world’s biggest commodity trading market. The UN Human Rights Council had attributed commodity futures trading to be the primary reason behind the global food crisis. Nearly 75 per cent of the blame for the unprecedented rise in food prices was directly linked to the exploitative commodity prices that prevailed.

India had escaped the global food crisis primarily because it had enough food stocks and also it had not linked its agriculture to the international futures market.

With public memory being short, the corona virus pandemic has perhaps come knocking at the right time. For past several years, mainline economists and policy makers have been seeking the reversal of the food procurement system that is primarily responsible for building the food reserves so essential for ensuring household food security. With all eyes on dismantling the network of regulated mandis under the Agricultural Produce Market Committee (APMC) Act, the government is keen to gradually withdraw from the open-ended procurement of wheat and rice. The Prime Minister Office has already written a letter to the Punjab government asking why the open-ended procurement under which whatever quantity of wheat and rice farmers bring to the mandis the government is under obligation to procure at the Minimum Support Price (MSP), is not curtailed.

The basic objective being to liberalise the agricultural markets which, in turn means not learning enough from what led to the global food crisis. Any tinkering with the food procurement system built so assiduously over the years is certainly fraught with unforeseen dangers. More so in a country which has the worst child mortality in the world, with over 8.80-lakh children succumbing to malnutrition and related ailments every year, termed by the UNICEF as – burden of death – clearly shows the problem is not with surplus food the country has but with its (mis)management. More so, at a time when the country ranks 102 among 117 countries in the Global Hunger Index.

Therefore, the policy makers need to listen again and again to what Dr M S Swaminathan had once said: “Future belongs to nations with grains and not guns.”India cannot afford to go back to the days of ‘ship-to-mouth’ existence when food would come directly from the ships to feed the hungry. #

India has enough food stocks to tide over CoronaVirus crisis. Deccan Herald. Mar 20, 2020

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