Gulf Times

Surging onion prices leave India’s consumers in tears

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Buying vegetables at a small market on the outskirts of Mumbai, Shubhangi Patil laments the recent rapid rise in the cost of everyday essentials, from cooking oil to sugar and now onions, a basic ingredient in most Indian food.

After the cost of fuel and edible oils hit record highs, Indian consumers like Patil are likely to be further squeezed by a rally in onion prices after heavy rainfall in the country’s key growing regions damaged the summersown crop and delayed winter crop planting.

Onions are also a politicall­ysensitive commodity, with price spikes contributi­ng to the fall of more than one state government in the past.

“The price of every essential commodity has gone up. Edible oil, sugar prices rose earlier and now onions and tomato prices have more than doubled in a fortnight, how one can manage a monthly budget when incomes are not rising?” Patil said.

India is also the world’s biggest onion exporter and the price rise could prompt New Delhi to restrict shipments, potentiall­y lifting prices further afield, especially in Bangladesh, Nepal, Malaysia and Sri Lanka, traders said.

“Too much rainfall in September led to disease attack and stunted growth of onion bulbs,” says Samadhan Bagul, a farmer from Dhule district, nearly 325km north of Mumbai, who expects to harvest just one tonne of onions from an acre of land instead of his usual five tonnes.

Key onion producing states such as Maharashtr­a, Madhya Pradesh, Gujarat and Karnataka received as much as 268% more rainfall than normal in September, according to the weather department.

The crop damage limited supplies, more than doubling wholesale prices at India’s largest onion trading hub, Lasalgaon in Maharashtr­a, to Rs33,400 ($444.82) per tonne in just a month.

Retail prices in metro areas such as Mumbai have jumped above Rs50 a kilogram.

Onion prices are likely to remain firm during the current festive season before starting to moderate from mid-January when supplies rise from the new season crop, said a Mumbaibase­d dealer, who declined to be named.

The higher Indian prices have prompted importing countries to shift to other suppliers such as Turkey and Egypt, said Ajit Shah, president of the Mumbai-based Onion Exporters’ Associatio­n.

India banned onion exports in 2019 and 2020 for a few months to calm local prices, creating a shortage in neighbouri­ng countries such as Bangladesh and Sri Lanka.

 ?? ?? An Indian paramilita­ry trooper stands guard at a market in Srinagar yesterday.
An Indian paramilita­ry trooper stands guard at a market in Srinagar yesterday.

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