Business Standard

AGRI REFORMS

- With inputs from Arnab Dutta Series concludes

that the provisions would come into force if the prices of horticultu­ral crops increased by 100 per cent and the prices of non-perishable­s such as pulses by 50 per cent.

This is in comparison with the last 12 months or the average of the last five years, whichever is lower.

“One has to see how this is executed, because breaching the 100 per cent barrier in the case of horticultu­re products isn’t very difficult,” said Sivakumar.

But, there are some who are already preparing for the new order.

Adani Wilmar ’s Deputy Chief Executive Officer Angshu Mallick, recently said the company may buy soyabean and mustard seeds directly from farmers in the near future, a call which will be taken by October, when the next crop arrives. Adani Wilmar sells its edible oil under the brand name, ‘Fortune.’

Arvind Mediratta, MD& CEO of Metro Cash & Carry India, while welcoming the new laws and the amendment said that this will attract investment­s from private companies as it will allow them to enter into a contract with thousands of farmers and ensure better control of the end product.

“Private companies will also invest in infrastruc­ture and units near the growing zones for processing where they are confident of assured raw materials,” Mediratta told Business Standard.

He said that from Metro Cash and Carry’s perspectiv­e, the company has been engaging in direct farming for many years now. It has five collection centres across the country that directly source from farmers without any middlemen. Meanwhile, according to a senior executive from a leading consumer goods company that procures in bulk, the recent amendments do not really affect them.

“Firstly, all procuremen­t contracts that we have with farmers are on a long-term basis and secondly, we pay them well above the market rate. So it is unlikely that farmers will go and sell their harvest to anyone else. Finally, in the last three decades, we have been able to retain almost 90 per cent of the farmers and their operations are well integrated with us,” said a senior official from the company, who did not wish to be named.

One sector that foresees a big jump in investment­s because of the Ordinances is warehousin­g and storage.

Though India’s agricultur­e and horticultu­re output has been setting records, warehousin­g and cold storage have not seen huge investment­s due to the long gestation period in breaking even. Investors normally eye earnings in the first year of their investment, but warehousin­g is a sector that takes a minimum of eight years to generate a profit, that too when the godowns are 100 per cent occupied — a fact that puts investors off.

Ramesh Duraiswami, managing director and chief executive officer, National Bulk Handling Corporatio­n, said that the agricultur­e sector reform package announced by the Centre was a good move that gave flexibilit­y to farmers or FPOS to sell their produce to anyone and anywhere of their choice.

Of course, he added, such out-ofmandi sales would certainly have revenue implicatio­ns for state government­s but these could be dealt with by using alternativ­e revenue streams such as GST and state tax to compensate for the losses incurred.

“While the intent of the government is good, actual implementa­tion of these reforms on the ground will be challengin­g as the Centre may face resistance from states as agricultur­e is a state subject,” said Sanjay Kaul, non-executive chairman, National Collateral Management Services.

For Madan Sabnavis, chief economist, Care Ratings, it was clear that the arrivals of agricultur­al commoditie­s would decline but they would not become totally extinct because all farmers would not be able to bring their produce directly either to large consumers or corporates.

“But farmers’ realisatio­n will go up by selling commoditie­s outside the mandi yard and consumers will negotiate a better and more cost-effective deal,” said Sabnavis.

At Bayer India, one of the largest plant protection companies, Simon Wiebusch, chief operating officer in the Crop Science Division, said that through these Ordinances, farmers will be empowered to engage with processors, aggregator­s, wholesaler­s, large retailers, online food retailers and exporters without depending on intermedia­ries.

“All of this will especially help smallholde­r farmers (who were previously less connected to the market) become an integral part of the overall farming eco-system,” said Wiebusch.

Wiebusch said that while it is understand­able that food price inflation is a concern, farmers will have to see the benefits also when crop prices rise and should not see their earnings potential capped when market opportunit­ies emerge. To this, Ramesh Chand, NITI Aayog member, said that several commoditie­s such as tomatoes have been out of the EC Act for ages yet there had been little big ticket investment in tomato storage and warehousin­g.

“The world over, government­s have some instrument­s to control prices and I don’t see any wrong in it. Moreover, we have exempted all those processors and exporters who haven't stored more than their installed capacity from the Act. This should take care of all value chain participan­ts,” said Chand.

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