Hindustan Times (Bathinda)

As onion prices soar, govt sets stock limit for traders

Declares retailers can stock onion only up to two tonnes while wholesaler­s are permitted to store up to 25 tonnes

- Zia Haq letters@ hindustant­imes. com

NEW DELHI: Onion prices are currently more than 100% of the past five years’ average, prompting the government to declare them as an essential commodity and imposing limits on how much traders can store.

Retail traders of onion can stock onion only up to two tonnes of the vegetable, while wholesale traders are permitted store up to 25 tonnes, the consumer affairs ministry said on Friday, a measure aimed at discouragi­ng hoarding of the bulb, as prices spiral during the ongoing festive season.

Rains in Maharashtr­a, Karnataka and Telangana have disrupted harvests and damaged crops, trimming supplies to markets.

“The all-india average retail price variation of onions as on 21 October when compared to last year is 22.12 % (from ₹45.33 to ₹ 55.60 per/ kg) and when compared to last five years’ average is 114.96 % (from ₹25.87 to 55.60 per/ kg). Therefore, the prices have increased by over 100% when compared with average of last 5 years and thus the price triggers under EC Act have been reached,” the ministry said.

Price levels needed to invoke stock limits under the recently amended Essential Commoditie­s Act have been breached and the stockholdi­ng limits will be in place till December 31, consumer affairs secretary Leena Nandan said. The Essential Commoditie­s ( Amendment) law, passed last month in Parliament, allows the government to regulate perishable commoditie­s when an extraordin­ary price rise occurs.

The ministry statement further said: “In order to moderate the price rise, the government took a pre- emptive step by announcing a ban on onion export on 14 September so as to ensure availabili­ty to domestic consumers at reasonable rates, before the expected arrival of Kharif onion.”

It added: “Thus the retail price rise was moderated to some extent, but recent reports of heavy rainfall in the onion growing districts of Maharashtr­a, Karnataka, andhra Pradesh and Madhya Pradesh have created concerns about damage to Kharif crop.”

On Twitter, consumer affairs minister Piyush Goyal said: “To control rising onion prices and curb hoarding, PM @NarendraMo­di government has taken the third step. Imposed stock limit of 2 tonnes on retailers and 25 tonnes on wholesaler­s.”

The two earlier steps were to impose a ban on exports on Sept 5 and offloading of onions from the a federally held reserve.

“Past experience­s show that during sustained supply- side pressures, measures such as stock- holding limits may not dramatical­ly alter the demandsupp­ly mismatch,” said Abhishek Agrawal of Comtrade, a commoditie­s trading firm.

To moderate the price rise, the govt took a pre-emptive step by announcing a ban on onion export on September 14. CONSUMER AFFAIRS MINISTRY STATEMENT

 ?? KUMAR/ BACHCHAN HT PHOTO ?? Traders at the APMC Onion Potato Market in Navi Mumbai on Friday.
KUMAR/ BACHCHAN HT PHOTO Traders at the APMC Onion Potato Market in Navi Mumbai on Friday.

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