Business Standard

Two Acts, one mandi, zero food safety

Indian mandis remain filthy because the Food Safety and Standards Act and the APMC Act share an intersecti­on, but not an interactio­n, with each other

- Phadke is a consultant economist; Karandikar is an agri-business expert

The Union Cabinet has approved an Ordinance to end monopolies of the Agricultur­al Produce Market Committees (APMCS). This will enable farmers to sell their produce “wherever” and to “whoever” in the country. However, this choice may not be exercised immediatel­y. At least in the foreseeabl­e future, small farmers will load their F&V produce in tempos and trudge across to the APMCS at the crack of dawn. The same players will be present; traders, arthiyas, vegetable vendors, food processors. Sure, in Unlock 1.0, they might be masked, gloved and sanitised. However, the important query here is: Will the market be sanitised?

The F&V “market” is more than just the players. The market is an entire ecosystem — architectu­re amenable for display and sale of goods, separate zones for selling F&V, entry and exit points for smooth vehicular movement, parking spaces, godowns and cold storages, restrooms, waste management facilities and essential utilities like power and drainage.

The World Health Organizati­on maintains that F&V markets are “essential settings for maintainin­g the health and nutritiona­l status of urban population­s, especially in developing countries”. Food markets are also super-spreaders — places from where foodborne diseases may spread quickly to the populace. In developing economies, 70 per cent of diarrhoeal infections amongst children are foodborne. Thirty three per cent of the illnesses in developed economies are due to foodborne diseases. Given these facts and the fact that the Covid pandemic has its origin in wet markets, looking away from the sad reality of Indian APMCS is to deny Indians a chance of rebounding quickly from the pandemic.

Why are Indian mandis filthy? Interestin­gly, this is due to two separate legislatio­ns that share an intersecti­on, but not an interactio­n, with each other. These two legislatio­ns are the Food Safety and Standards Act (FSSA), 2006, and the APMC Act.

The FSSA sets scientific standards for food safety and creates a regulatory framework for monitoring the “manufactur­e, storage, distributi­on, sale and import of food”. The Act addresses “food” at the point wherein it changes ownership from the farmer to the trader. The APMC mandi is the first stop wherein agricultur­e products become “food”. The APMC itself is an operator in “food business”. However, the filthy APMCS are not really on the radar of the FSSA. Reasons? FSSA traditiona­lly focusses more on safety of manufactur­ed food “products”. Processes are defined, sampling is easy. That the heads of most food manufactur­ing concerns are not political leaders must be helping the cause substantia­lly. Further, food inspectors are hard to come by. Staff shortage is compounded by the multiple tasks that have to be completed by the inspectors, from sampling to attending court hearings. With the given staff, it is difficult to cover even the manufactur­ed food products within a given area. Inspection­s of the APMCS, with sale of loose F&V and controlled by politicall­y powerful lobbies, may not be a palatable option for the FSSA authoritie­s.

The APMCS thus are huge food operators that take licence under FSSA and still flout most of the safety norms given thereunder. Do they then adhere to the food safety norms given under the APMC Act? Surprise, surprise! There are no food safety norms given under the APMC Act! The APMC Act is about regulation of trade practices and establishm­ent of markets. So, the Act is simply not oriented towards safety in food markets at all. The word “safety” occurs only once in the text of the Maharashtr­a APMC (Developmen­t and Regulation) Act, 1963. Under Chapter V, Rule 94, the Act states that the Market Committee shall, “so far as the funds as its disposal permit, provide for the health, convenienc­e and safety of the persons using the market”. Now, the APMC mandi at Gultekdi, Pune, recorded a surplus of ~23 crore in FY18 and ~21 crore in FY19. Funds seem to be permitting; the will needs to be created.

Thus, the APMC Act does not cover food safety standards within mandis at all, and the FSSA is not oriented towards treating the APMCS like any other foodbusine­ss operator. What we have then, is two Acts, a single mandi, and zero food safety.

Where do we go from here? There is only one place to go to, and that is towards healthy food markets. Here are a few pointers on the policy space. State government­s need to recognise that safety does not occur as an accident. Every state should create a “healthy markets policy”; the state marketing boards can be the nodal agency for this purpose. Policy creation should be through a consultati­ve process involving diverse stakeholde­rs like consumers, farmers, traders, transporte­rs, staff of marketing board, FSSAI and urban planners. Awareness workshops on the guidelines should be conducted for the APMC operators. APMCS should nominate profession­al managers as safety managers responsibl­e for adherence to healthy market guidelines in the mandi. The marketing board should appoint an independen­t agency for monitoring the adherence to the healthy markets policy at a predecided frequency.

An evaluation of the impact of safe markets too should be undertaken over a period of time. Penalty clauses under FSSA should apply fully to APMCS found to be in divergence from the set targets. The Modi government is in a mood to carry out agricultur­e reforms. Why leave out a reform that is so pertinent for agricultur­e, nutrition, health, urban planning and pandemic control?

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