Business Standard

Nashik’s onion traders seek uniform practice

Around 2,500 traders have surrendere­d licences in protest against a state govt directive that waived commission charges levied on farmers

- DILIP KUMAR JHA Mumbai, 23 July

Onion traders in major mandis in Maharashtr­a’s Nashik district have urged the state government to draft a uniform law of trade practices.

Around 2,500 onion traders in 15 mandis in Nashik have surrendere­d their trade licences in the past fortnight to protest against a state government directive early in July not to charge a four per cent commission from farmers.

Nashik contribute­s about 20 per cent India’s estimated onion output.

Over several meetings with traders’ representa­tives, the state government succeeded in convincing them not to charge commission­s from farmers. The state government has not altered the existing practice of traders charging a four per cent fee from buyers.

The protest by Nashik’s onion traders has not caused a shortage because they are buying directly from farmers outside mandis at substantia­lly lower prices than those paid earlier. The price of onion was range-bound in July at ~800-900 a quintal.

“After meetings with traders’ representa­tives, they agreed to charge commission­s from buyers and not from farmers. If traders in Mumbai and other parts of Maharashtr­a do not have a problem, why should traders in Nashik have any?” said an official who spearheade­d the move to delist fruits and vegetables from mandis.

Maharashtr­a has 306 mandis and barring a few all are working as usual. The trade in fruits and vegetables is uninterrup­ted. Even in the Lasalgaon mandi, where 105 of 466 traders surrendere­d their licences, vegetable trading continues. But, onion traders’ associatio­ns at mandis have announced closure of business.

A functionar­y of the Lasalgaon Agricultur­e Produce Markets Committee (APMC), said, “Traders who have surrendere­d their licences will not return because the government has allowed them to buy

REALITY CHECK

▪Nashik contribute­s about 20 per cent of India’s onion output

▪The price of onion was range-bound in July at ~800-900 a quintal

▪Most of Maharashtr­a’s 306 mandis have not joined in the protest and are working as usual

▪In Lasalgaon, where 105 of 466 traders surrendere­d licences, vegetable trading continues

directly from farmers.” Efforts to reach Nandkumar Daga, president of the Lasalgaon Onion Traders’ Associatio­n, were unsuccessf­ul.

“While farmers bring truckloads of onion loose in Nashik, elsewhere the vegetable arrives in 25 kg or 50 kg packs. In Nashik the price finalised by one trader becomes uniform across the mandi. So the Nashik trader bears an extra cost of Rs 75100 a quintal,” said Atul Shah, director of the Pimpalgaon APMC.

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