Business Standard

Last year’s farm output clouded by data ANNUAL GROWTH

- SANJEEB MUKHERJEE New Delhi, 23 July

Agricultur­e and allied sectors grew by 1.2 per cent in 2015-16 despite two consecutiv­e droughts that caused widespread distress in more than 10 states.

The government explanatio­n is, farm output managed to remain in positive territory largely because of improved performanc­e in the animal husbandry, livestock and dairy industries. But this claim is questionab­le because the method of calculatin­g output for these allied industries is not robust.

Of the ~19,95,251 crore gross value added (GVA) in agricultur­e in 2014-15, the share of crops was 63 per cent and noncrops, which includes livestock, forestry and logging as well as fishing and aquacultur­e, comprised the rest.

In 2015-16, the share of crops dipped to 61 per cent. The noncrop sector grew 5 per cent that year, much higher than overall farm growth. The annual milk production in 2015-16 rose 9.59 per cent, eggs 4.32 per cent and fish 12 per cent.

The share of crops has dipped 4.4 percentage points since 2011-12. GVA is calculated by multiplyin­g the market rate with output and deducting the input price. The problem is the method of calculatin­g output in non-crop farming is not as robust as in crops.

“The GVA of livestock products and horticultu­re is shaky. The method of calculatin­g data is not robust. Any growth based on good performanc­e of livestock and horticultu­re is always open to criticism,” said Ashok Gulati, former chairman of the Commission for Agricultur­e Costs and Prices (CACP) and chair professor of agricultur­e at ICRIER.

“Also, if growth in agricultur­e is high despite two consecutiv­e years of drought, food inflation should have been under control,” he pointed out.

Gulati said the output of three main items for arriving at the GVA in agricultur­e—milk, wheat and soybean—was doubtful in 2015-16.

“It is difficult to believe that despite a crippling drought in more than 10 states and an acute drinking water crisis in others, milk production in 201516

Agricultur­e & allied activities Industry Services

gross value added

2012-13 2013-14 2014-15 2015-16 has seen record growth.”

All indication­s show the wheat crop in 2015-16 is not more than 90 million tonnes but the government is sticking to an earlier estimate of 94.04 million tonnes. The government believes traders have purchased over 5 million tonnes of wheat, but experts say the country does not have that much storage capacity.

The official estimate for soybean in 2015-16 is 8.91 million tonnes but the trade feels the number could be lower. “All these show officials could be cooking up numbers to please their bosses,” Gulati said.

Agreeing that livestock and horticultu­re numbers were unreliable, S Mahendra Dev, director of the Mumbai-based Indira Gandhi Institute of Developmen­t Research (IGIDR), said, “Indian agricultur­e has indeed developed an inherent resistance to drought in the last few years.”

Experts had anticipate­d farm output would contract 6 per cent in 2009-10 after one of the worst droughts in decades, but agricultur­al production expanded 0.4 per cent.

Dev said projecting output on a fall in wheat procuremen­t could go wrong because the government might alter its purchase to suit its needs.

A committee constitute­d by the Central Statistica­l Organisati­on under Dev in 2014 had pointed out significan­t difference­s between price data furnished by state government­s and actual harvest prices, which needed to be corrected to arrive at the GVA. The panel had also questioned the methodolog­y for the livestock, fisheries and dairy industries, and suggested changes.

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