Drop in price of pulses reveals flaws in
agriculture policy
A good monsoon that
led to record sowing and production of pulses -- especially tur dal (pigeon
pea) -- has almost halved their wholesale and retail prices in 2017, a year
after dal prices skyrocketed to Rs 200 per kg in some cities at the end of
2015.
In many
state-regulated agricultural markets of major tur-producing states such as
Maharashtra and Karnataka, prices have fallen to Rs 4,000 per quintal in some
markets, 20 per cent below the minimum support price (MSP) of Rs 5,050 per
quintal (including a bonus of Rs 425) since December 2016.
A ban on exports,
restrictions on stocking by private agencies in a bumper-crop year and absence
of futures trading in agricultural commodities have been cited as key reasons
for pulses to follow "the usual roller-coaster of high and low
prices" in consecutive years, wrote Ashok Gulati, Infosys Chair professor
for agriculture at the Indian Council for Research on International Economic
Relations, in The Indian Express.
After two consecutive
drought years, a good monsoon prevailed in most parts of India in 2016, barring
some districts of Punjab, Haryana, Kerala and Gujarat, among the major states.
The situation turned
after a good monsoon, even as a perfect storm around tur dal -- monsoon
failures, insufficient MSP, poor yield per hectare of dal and growing public
preference to opt for eggs and meat for proteins -- would keep its price high
for a long time.
Monsoon in 2016 turned
out to be above normal in Maharashtra, productivity increased from about 360
kg/ha to 760 kg/ha and farmers planted dal on a record area, since the previous
year, 2015, fetched them record prices at above Rs 100/kg.
Maharashtra, Karnataka, Telangana and Gujarat are
the major tur-producing states. Rural district markets connect with farmers
directly and consumers indirectly, since they involve intermediaries. At large
consumer markets in cities, such as Mumbai and Ahmedabad, pulses from district
markets are sold to retailers and consumers.
The wholesale price in major district markets -- Amravati, Gulbarga, Vadodara and Narsinghpur -- in the four major tur-producing states surged in 2015 and saw an almost equal or worse decline in 2016.
The wholesale price in major district markets -- Amravati, Gulbarga, Vadodara and Narsinghpur -- in the four major tur-producing states surged in 2015 and saw an almost equal or worse decline in 2016.
Supply fell in 2015,
reducing dal in the market, compared to 2014. Traders paid farmers more than Rs
100/kg for tur -- a record -- and middlemen and retailers increased the price
to Rs 180/kg in grocery shops.
In 2016, the sowing
area of tur in Maharashtra increased 25 per cent to 1.53 million hectare but
production is estimated to have increased 160 per cent, from 444,000 tonne in
2015-16 to 1.17 million tonne in 2016-17.
To reduce the impact
of the supply glut on farmers, the central government increased the buffer
stock -- produce that government buys directly from the farmer as a safety
measure for farmers as well as market availability -- for pulses ten-fold, from
0.2 million tonne to two million tonne.
Although the buffer
stock has been increased, government agencies are not ready to stockpile pulses
because storage space is limited, as is evident in Parbhani district,
Maharashtra.
"Farmers with tur
have been waiting at the district procurement centre of Food Corporation of
India for more than a week as the Centre is running out of space," a
regional agricultural officer, who did not wish to be named, told IndiaSpend.
"They will get a
better price (MSP) at the centre, but the tractor with tur costs them around Rs
800/day, which is effectively reducing the price from MSP to the market price
of around Rs 4,000 per quintal," he said.
In Karnataka, water
shortage has imperilled the summer and winter (kharif and rabi) crops. The
state government has responded with a special state bonus of Rs 450 per
quintal, taking the procurement price of tur to Rs 5,500 per quintal, the
highest ever by any state.
Not just government support, but having a sound marketing policy is equally important, Gulati argued in his article, a view he expressed in August 2016 as well. "Farmers should take planting decisions based on likely future prices and not last year's market prices," his March 2017 column said.
Not just government support, but having a sound marketing policy is equally important, Gulati argued in his article, a view he expressed in August 2016 as well. "Farmers should take planting decisions based on likely future prices and not last year's market prices," his March 2017 column said.
If farmers knew from
futures prices that they would be paid below the MSP this season, they could
have opted for cotton, which saw a reduction in area sown.
Pulses exports were
banned in 2006, when record exports of 0.5 million tonne in 2005 aggravated
domestic shortfalls. The ban has not been lifted, with some exceptions. Exports
are about one per cent of total domestic production, according to government
data.
The pulses shortage in
2015-16 saw imports rise to 5.8 million tonne, or a third of the production. In
the oversupply year of 2016-17, exports remained banned.
Even when farmers are
getting less than Rs 4,000 per quintal in domestic markets, pulses are still
being imported at a price above Rs 10,000 per quintal, Mallikarjun Kharge,
leader of the Congress parliamentary party said in Lok Sabha.
A government committee
headed by Chief Economic Adviser Arvind Subramanian recommended in September
2016 that the MSP for tur should be increased to Rs 6,000 per quintal in 2017
and Rs 7,000 per quintal in 2018.
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