Business Standard

‘There are no free lunches in this business’

-

Chief Economic Advisor ARVIND

SUBRAMANIA­N’s report on incentivis­ing pulses production through MSPs (minimum support price) lays down a broad road map to make India self-sufficient in this critical protein crop and, more importantl­y, reduce the price volatility associated with the crop once and for all. In an interview, Subramania­n tells Sanjeeb Mukherjee that protection of farmers’ interest should be paramount and there could be no tradeoff between that and consumers’ interests. He also said the Centre would have to shell out money if it was serious about solving the pulses crisis. Edited excerpts:

Your report on pulses advocates removing all stock-holding limits, export curbs, etc. But, the government has gone ahead and extended the stockholdi­ng limits for one more year. How do you view this contradict­ion?

A very important thing that I learnt while preparing this report is that at every point in time, there is an apparent conflict between the consumers’ interest and farmers’ interest. The argument made by policymake­rs of striking a balance between consumers’ interest and producers’ interest is a very short-term thing and there is no trade-off really between them, because if you hurt farmers this time, it will come back and bite the consumers next time.

Another important message from the report is that at times when we have to go for this tradeoff to keep food prices down, we tend to use very blunt instrument­s like export ban, futures ban, stock limits …. I mean, can we have more graduated responses?

And, the last point that I want to make is that if you are able to procure pulses at MSP then it is okay. But, if you aren’t, then we have to take steps to prevent market prices from a falling MSP. Quick review all the bans and export curbs are part of that.

Stock limits have been extended for a year days after you recommende­d against it. How do you view this?

Well, this a permissive provision and can be changed at any point of time.

Your report also talks about giving 1720 per cent rise in MSP of pulses, while the maximum increase so far has been less than 10 per cent. How will you then control inflation?

We have strongly recommende­d in our report that going forward, the Commission for Agricultur­al Costs & Prices should include social costs of growing a crop into its recommenda­tions. I was shocked that something around ~20 a kg is the social cost of growing paddy relative to pulses. The second part of the question on price response and inflation is that it is true that you got such a bumper output in pulses because prices were at elevated levels. The trick is to have a price where you get desired output response but no spike in retail prices. A MSP of ~70 a kg for rabi gram in 2017 recommende­d by us is exactly the same rate.

So, this social cost should be applicable for other crops as well, say, maize or oilseeds?

In principle, we should do it for all crops except cereals, but what we have done in this report is calculate cost relative to pulses. In future, we should do it crop by crop.

The nominal expenditur­e that the Centre envisages for managing the proposed 2 million tonnes of buffer stock is a huge ~18,500 crore. Who pays for this?

First on procuremen­t, if we really want to bring up pulses to the levels of cereals, etc, procuremen­t has to be good. And, if you notice, this season, the pulses procuremen­t machinery is being ramped up, so it will be a test case as to whether we can effectivel­y procure pulses from farmers. But, it might not be sufficient to match the full requiremen­t. That is where our recommenda­tions on needing a new institutio­n come into relevance. It should have a government holding at less than 49 per cent so that it has freedom and flexibilit­y of its own, but not at the expense of existing institutio­ns.

Also, pulses deteriorat­e more rapidly for which you need nimble procuremen­t, better storage facilities and regular buying & selling, as there is no public distributi­on system. Whatever excess stock is there, that needs to be released.

You talked about an agency in publicpriv­ate partnershi­p (PPP) mode. But, the kind of examples we have in the Food Corporatio­n of India (FCI) and other institutio­ns are the ones where we have a huge backlog of funds. The same can happen here also?

We had an example of PPP in procuremen­t in paddy through NCML, which collapsed as FCI stopped paying money. Going forward, if the government is serious about pulses, which I believe they are, I think the money will come.

Also, 2 million tonnes won’t be bought in one-year, plus there are no free lunches in this business. In the medium term, the money has to come from budgetary support.

“IF YOU ARE ABLE TO PROCURE PULSES AT MSP THEN IT IS OKAY. BUT, IF YOU AREN’T, THEN WE HAVE TO TAKE STEPS TO PREVENT MARKET PRICES FROM A FALLING MSP”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India