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LATEST NEWS UPDATES | Data in: hoarding fears hyped, price-rise problem is seasonal -Anil Sasi

Data in: hoarding fears hyped, price-rise problem is seasonal -Anil Sasi

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published Published on Aug 10, 2014   modified Modified on Aug 10, 2014
-The Indian Express


For tomato, however, the difference jumped from 4 per cent on July 8 to 100 per cent on August 8.

A month after the central government brought onions and potatoes under the Essential Commodities Act, 1955, and empowered states to put stockholding limits on these vegetables to rein in hoarders, the difference between their wholesale and retail prices has not reduced.

And in the case of other kitchen staples such as tomato and rice, the gap between wholesale and retail prices has actually widened over this period.

Data from the Prime Monitoring Cell of the Department of Consumer Affairs show that as of Friday (August 8), the difference between the wholesale and retail prices of potato was 40 per cent, marginally higher than the 39 per cent differential that was recorded exactly a month ago on July 8.

Four days earlier, on July 4, the Cabinet Committee on Economic Affairs had approved imposition of stockholding limits on onion and potato under the Essentials Act. The decision allowed states to carry out de-hoarding operations to control the prices of these vegetables. Theoretically, if this action had worked, the difference in the wholesale and retail prices should have come down subsequently.

While the wholesale-retail gap in the price of potato rose marginally, that of onion remained unchanged at 20 per cent. Modal wholesale and retail prices per kg taken across 59 centres show them to have remained constant at Rs 25 and Rs 30 respectively on both July 8 and August 8.

For tomato, however, the difference jumped from 4 per cent on July 8 to 100 per cent on August 8. The difference in wholesale and retail prices of rice on the same two dates increased from 9 per cent to 36 per cent.

This data gives credence to the overwhelming view among experts that the spurt in retail prices of vegetables and other products has more to do with the seasonal mismatch in demand and supply. The fact that the wholesale-retail gap has not narrowed more than a month after the government announced these steps, to some extent highlights the futility of coercive measures against middlemen and hoarders, who have been blamed almost squarely by the NDA government.

The CCEA approval for steps to target hoarders came after the Commerce Ministry announced early last month a hike in the minimum export price (MEP) of onion to $ 500 per tonne. Before this hike, in June, the MEP - or the rate below which no exports are allowed - on onion was re-introduced by the NDA government at $ 300 per tonne, only three months after the previous government had abolished it (in March). For potato, the government imposed MEP of $ 450 per tonne on June 26.
What seems to have been ignored, however, is the fact that a rise in the prices of onions and potatoes - as also of other vegetables - during this period is not abnormal. It does not indicate any endemic shortage, and prices fall after the new crop arrives after the monsoon. The situation this year might have been aggravated somewhat due to damage caused to the rabi onion crop by untimely rain and hail in April-May.

Ashok Gulati, chair professor at the Indian Council for Research on International Economic Relations and former chairman of the Commission for Agricultural Costs and Prices, said better policy tools to stabilise prices would be liberal import policies, coupled with high priority to processed food.

Despite its reformist reputation, the BJP seems to have been historically more rigid on controls on onion and potato trade. Both commodities were under the Essential Commodities Act from 1999 to 2004, before being freed by the UPA government. Both are now back in the list.

More substantive reforms such as putting in place platforms for buyers to source directly from farmers, and empowering the private sector to start its own markets in competition with APMC mandis, are still to be taken up.


The Indian Express, 10 August, 2014, http://indianexpress.com/article/india/india-others/data-in-hoarding-fears-hyped-price-rise-problem-is-seasonal/99/


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