Business Standard

Steep hike...

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Union Home Minister Rajnath Singh told reporters after the Cabinet Committee on Economic Affairs (CCEA) meeting that the MSP hike was a step towards fulfilling the government objective of doubling farmers’ income by 2022. "It will have a pass on impact on the entire rural economy," he said. The government was confident of addressing any impact on inflation, he said, adding that it would not shy away from taking steps to improve the condition of farmers. Reacting to the government move, shares of companies related to the agricultur­e sector surged by up to 13 per cent. The extent of impact on food inflation would depend on the government mechanism to ensure that crops, other than wheat and rice, are also purchased from farmers in consultati­on with the NITI Aayog, according to people in the know. A formal announceme­nt on the model is expected soon. “In the short term, the impact on inflation due to the hike in MSPs will vary from crop to crop. It will also depend on the procuremen­t mechanism," said Shashank Bhide, director of Madras Institute of Developmen­t Studies. In the long term, much would depend on farmers’ response to high MSPs and the improvemen­t in production, he added.

According to A Prasanna of ICICI Securities, the headline CPI is expected to rise by 50-90 bps immediatel­y due to the MSP increase. The input cost for the calculatio­n of MSPs has been based on A2+FL cost and not C2, a long-standing demand of farmers’ groups. A2+FL broadly implies all input cost plus own and family labour, while comprehens­ive cost (C2) includes all paid-out expenses incurred, plus imputed value of unpaid family labour along with rentals and interest foregone on owned land and fixed capital. MSP fixed on the basis of C2 cost is much higher than that fixed over A2+FL cost. However, in the absence of a formal procuremen­t model for crops other than paddy and wheat, the new MSP mechanism may not translate into big gains for the end farmer because convention­ally there is no regular system to purchase non-cereal crops. The MSP of common grade paddy, the biggest foodgrain grown during the kharif season, has been hiked by ~200 a quintal to ~1,750 — the steepest in recent times.

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