Govt eyes new farm exports policy to stem falling prices
AGRICULTURAL REFORM To be more ‘open and stable’ to check slide in farm trade surplus NEWDELHI:
The Modi government will unveil a new agricultural exports policy, as it looks for ways to improve sagging commodity prices, a big reason for farmer angst in many states.
There has also been an alarming slide in India’s farm trade surplus: the value of exports, in dollar terms, has been falling visà-vis imports. Lower realisation from exports, among other reasons, has hurt farm incomes and also induced domestic gluts, even as the government has set an ambitious target of doubling agricultural incomes in the next five years.
The new trade policy aims to be more “open and stable” so that there is predictability, an official said. It will contain measures to streamline compliance of international food-safety or phytosanitary requirements, promote “promising products” such as organic foods and create farmto-port as well as farm-to-airport cold chains, according to the official cited above.
The policy will focus on nearly 25 farm export clusters, along the lines of small and medium export clusters that exist for manufacturing. Clusters tend to lower the per unit cost of solutions due to concentration of a large number of producers with similar problems. “India is one of the largest producers of fruits, vegetables, milk and rice globally. Under the new exports policy, our focus will be to ensure our farmers get uninterrupted access to international markets and good prices,” agriculture minister Radha Mohan Singh said.
Despite large production volumes of many commodities, a majority of the production is consumed domestically with low levels of processing and export.
The new export regime will focus on “effective handling” of phytosanitary issues as well as address technical barriers to trade in domestic and destination markets, the official quoted in the first instance said.
India’s robust trade surplus in farm commodities, in dollar terms, has plunged 55% since 2014-15, mainly on account of low international commodity prices, apart from export disruptions due to non-compliance of phytosanitary norms. India’s trade surplus in agricultural items fell from US$ 27174.2 in 2013-14 to about US$ 7833.8 in 2016-17.
“The idea is to link our famers to a value or a supply chain and compliance (with phytosanitary measures),” agriculture secretary Shobhana K. Pattanayak said. Most EU countries have now further lowered the permissible residue limits for tricyclazole, a fungicide used in basmati, a major export item, Pattanayak said. Phytosanitary standards denote measures that ensure consumers are supplied with food that is free from contaminants.
India’s food-safety norms administered by the Food Safety and Standards Authority doesn’t apply to exports and it is for importing countries to decide whether it is fit for consumption.
Phytosanitary standards denote measures that ensure consumers are supplied with food that is free from certain additives, contaminants, toxins or disease-causing organisms.
Two years ago, the EU had banned Indian mangoes, causing a price crash. Iran had banned Indian rice imports too. On December 6, releasing the government’s mid-term review of the Foreign Trade Policy 20152020, commerce minister Suresh Prabhu’s ministry announced incentives of ₹1,354 crore for farm products and ₹759 crore for marine products.