Hindustan Times (East UP)

Law on MSP may not benefit farm sector

- Zia Haq zia.haq@htlive.com ANI

NEW DELHI: A new deal to reshape the country’s antiquated agricultur­e sector has hit a deadend as protests simmer over three new laws that farmers say will hurt their incomes.

The reforms allow businesses to freely trade farm produce outside so-called mandi system controlled by the government, permit private traders to stockpile large quantities of essential commoditie­s for future sales and lay down new rules for contract farming.

Farmers fear the reforms could pave the way for the government to stop buying staples at federally fixed minimum support prices (MSPs) and would leave them at the mercy of private buyers.

The government has insisted it will still buy staples at MSPs, but farmers have demanded a law guaranteei­ng minimum state-set prices for all major produce. The aim is to prohibit sale of any farm produce below the MSP threshold.

MSPs, which began with the Green Revolution, mainly benefit paddy and wheat growers because the government procures only these two commoditie­s in sufficient­ly large quantities.

Indian farmers receive lowerthan-internatio­nal prices for their produce because of increasing costs of cultivatio­n, inadequate markets and the government’s obsession with keeping food prices low.

This has worsened agricultur­e’s terms of trade, measured as a ratio of prices of agri-products to prices of manufactur­ed items. The crisis, therefore, is not one of low production, but of low prices.

“An MSP is an important policy tool that helped achieve food selfsuffic­iency because it gave farmers assured prices...It is an administra­tive exercise that does not have statutory backing,” said Abhijit Sen, a farm economist.

While the government announces MSP for 23 major crops, setting them at 1.5 times the cost of cultivatio­n to account for inflation, analysts say a blanket law mandating that no trader can buy farm commodity below this threshold price makes little economic sense.

The most immediate impact of such a law will be a higher inflation. Higher MSPs prima facie lead to higher overall prices. “Every 1 percentage point increase in MSPs leads to a 15-basis point increase in inflation,” said economist Sonal Varma. A basis point is one-hundredth of a percentage point.

Economists say an MSP mechanism that ignores dynamics, such as demand and global prices, creates distortion­s. If it is not profitable for private traders to buy at MSP, when demand is low, then the private sector will simply exit the markets. In such a scenario, the government simply cannot be a monopoly buyer of all produce.

The government already procures staggering quantities of surplus rice and wheat, which have become unmanageab­le. As of September 2020, the government held 70 million tonnes of rice and wheat in federal stocks, whereas food-security norms require reserves of 41.1 million tonnes as of July and 30.7 million tonnes as of October each year.

If MSP is made mandatory, then India’s agricultur­al exports could become non-competitiv­e as government’s assured prices are way higher than domestic and internatio­nal market prices. No trader would want to buy at a higher price and export at a lower rate.

So, the assumption behind the new changes is that free competitio­n in agricultur­al markets will ultimately result in a market-clearing price, at which quantity supplied equals quantity demanded, resulting in equilibriu­m.

According to economist Ashok Gulati, the cost of procuring, storing and distributi­ng rice to the poor comes to about Rs 37 a kg.

For wheat, it is around Rs 27 a kg. The cost to company (CTC) of labour of the Food Corporatio­n of India (FCI) is six-eight times higher than private labour. Therefore, market prices of rice and wheat are much lower than what it costs the FCI to buy the staples.

On the other hand, the MSP policy benefits farmers only in a handful of states. The 70th round of the National Sample Survey showed only 13.5% of paddy growers and 16.2% of wheat growers actually received MSPs.

While MSPs have incentivis­ed foodgrains over other crops, they have given rise to serious imbalances of water and land resources and shifted land away from crops such as pulses and oilseeds, necessitat­ing costly imports. Also, MSPs, as administer­ed prices, tend to distort market prices.

This also means surplus stocks can’t be exported without a subsidy, which invites the World Trade Organisati­on’s objections. WTO rules cap government procuremen­t for subsidized food programmes by developing countries at 10% of the total value of agricultur­al production based on 1986-88 prices in dollar terms.

“Support to farmers can never be in question. But support in the form of MSP, which is market-distorting, raises questions such as whether can we move to other ways of supporting farmers that cause less collateral damage,” said Pravesh Sharma, a fellow at New Delhi’s Indian Council for Research on Internatio­nal Economic Relations.

 ??  ?? Bhartiya Kisan Union members during farmers protest at DelhiGhazi­abad Border in New Delhi on Thursday.
Bhartiya Kisan Union members during farmers protest at DelhiGhazi­abad Border in New Delhi on Thursday.

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