Daily Press

For India’s Modi, onion crisis raises a big stink

- Associated Press

NEW DELHI — With crops ruined by a combinatio­n of drought and rot, the price of onions has skyrockete­d in India and added to worries over food inflation at a time when the slowing economy has become a liability for the government.

The price of onions, a staple now too expensive for most Indian families, is seen by some economists as a key indicator of economic stability and opposition parties have seized on the issue by wearing onion garlands at street rallies and offering onions instead of gold as wedding gifts.

“The common man doesn’t understand bigger economic issues. But the onion prices will make him think twice before trusting a government,” said Karthik Ganguly, a political analyst and a professor of economics at Delhi University. “The soaring onion prices can put the government in a fix.”

The onion crisis is piling pressure on Prime Minister Narendra Modi, who is already dealing with largescale protests against a new citizenshi­p law that has raised concerns about his party’s Hindu nationalis­t agenda and further alienated the country’s 200 million Muslims.

Onion prices in some Indian cities have tripled to $1.25 per pound over the past month after untimely rains caused crops to fail. The government has attempted to deal with the problem by selling onions at a subsidized price in some states, halting exports and cracking down on hoarders. It also plans to import onions from Turkey and Egypt, but those shipments won’t arrive until January.

Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman answered questions in Parliament about soaring onion prices by saying she doesn’t “eat much onion and garlic.”

“I come from a family that doesn’t have much to do with onions,” Sitharaman said.

The remark was seen by many Indians as a sign that the government isn’t taking the issue seriously.

“This tells us how the government thinks about the very basic problems faced by the common people. They don’t care,” said Shalini Mehta, a teacher.

The onion crisis is adding to existing economic concerns. India’s economy expanded 4.5% in the JulySeptem­ber quarter, its slowest rate in six quarters. Retail inflation has also been rising, touching a three year high of 5.54% in November. The slowdown follows several major shocks brought on by Modi’s government, including a massive demonetiza­tion meant to counter widespread tax evasion and corruption and the introducti­on of a goods and services tax.

Now onion prices are hitting family budgets and the bottom line of street vendors and small restaurant­s.

“An average middleclas­s Indian is now thinking twice before buying onions,” said Sushil Kumar Jain, who heads the New Delhi wing of Confederat­ion of All India Traders, a body of small traders and businesses.

Mahtab Wali, a restaurant manager in New Delhi, said his chefs have cut back on the amount of onion they use in dishes. “The onion,” he said, “has now become a rare precious stone inside our kitchen.”

 ?? AJIT SOLANKI/AP ?? An Indian trader checks onions at a market in Ahmadabad. Prices have soared recently.
AJIT SOLANKI/AP An Indian trader checks onions at a market in Ahmadabad. Prices have soared recently.

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