Hindustan Times (Bathinda)

Export curbs for boosting income

New govt plan to look into changing current policy of using export restrictio­ns on food items to prevent domestic inflation, which is leading to losses

- Zia Haq zia.haq@htlive.com ■

NEW DELHI: Bhupinder Pal Singh, a farmer from Babain, a village in Haryana’s Kurukshetr­a district, was unable to sell a third of his 4,400 quintals of potato harvest in May 2017. The unsold produce soon turned into heaps of rotten slush. Singh says he sold 40 quintals for ₹2,306 to a local trader, meaning he got ₹57.65 a quintal. “It was the worst year as long as I can remember,” he says.

The potato crisis of 2017 had to do with a knee-jerk farm trade policy that tends to clamp down on exports at the slightest hint of rising consumer prices. In June 2014, to rein in potato prices, the government imposed a minimum export price on potatoes, put the commodity under the Essential Commoditie­s Act and also allowed dutyfree imports. This choked off exports and caused domestic prices to crash amid a potato glut of 48 million tonnes.

To avoid such disasters, India is now looking to setup a national agricultur­e trade policy, similar to the country’s three-year foreign trade policies. The farm exports policy will be geared towards promoting exports rather than them being used as a tool to control domestic prices, a person familiar with the developmen­t said.

Last month, the commerce ministry unveiled a draft national agricultur­e export policy in step with the government’s target of doubling farmers’ incomes. It has sought to boost agricultur­al exports from $30 billion currently to nearly $60 billion by 2022.

Consultati­ons among stakeholde­rs, including the agricultur­e ministry and the Agricultur­al and Processed Food Products Export Developmen­t Authority (APEDA), began this month. Key proposals include ensuring processed agricultur­al products and all organic produce will be free of export restrictio­ns in future. The agricultur­e and food ministries will also identify food items which will be permanentl­y free from export controls.

The government may form “a trade perspectiv­e over a 5-10 year period” and undertake a “mid-term review of agricultur­e trade policy...” the official said. The agricultur­e ministry, along with APEDA, has identified 50 farm export clusters, the official said. The Centre will soon hold consultati­ons with states to standardis­e taxes in local markets for export-oriented produce, he said. For instance, local market taxes vary widely for basmati rice, a key export commodity. It is 4% in Punjab and Haryana and 1.6% in Rajasthan. For pulses, the fees are 1% in Maharashtr­a and 2.5% in UP.

India’s agricultur­al exports grew five times from about $8.7 billion in 2004-05 to $42.6 billion during 2013-14. This however fell to $33 billion in 2016-17. Farm economist Ashok Gulati says knee-jerk export restrictio­ns on food items to prevent domestic inflation have deprived farmers of higher prices in the global market. A paper by Gulati, Infosys chair professor and Shweta Saini, who works with policy think tank ICRIER, analysed 10-year data to show that India’s agri trade policy had a “pro-consumer bias”. The government’s Doubling Farmers’ Income also says India’s exports policy “does not promote agricultur­al trade but is mainly used to control prices in the domestic market”. According to the new draft policy, a three-year ban on non-basmati rice exports during 2008-11 amid a rice glut led to a “notional loss of $5.6 billion”.

 ?? SHUTTERSTO­CK ?? The Centre will soon hold consultati­ons with states to standardis­e taxes in ■ local markets for exportorie­nted produce, say officials.
SHUTTERSTO­CK The Centre will soon hold consultati­ons with states to standardis­e taxes in ■ local markets for exportorie­nted produce, say officials.

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