Bizarre are the ways of the government when it comes to managing, or mismanaging, the country’s food economy. On the one hand, it goes on mopping up bulk of the wheat and rice arriving in the mandis to build up its grain stocks, clearly to prevent foodgrain prices from falling below the Minimum Support Price (MSP) level. On the other hand, it plans to offload 3 million tonnes of wheat...
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Govt rice purchases cross 27 mn tonnes so far
Rice procurement has crossed 27 million tonnes in 2009-10, down by about three per cent over the last year's due to low production. Food Corporation of India (FCI), the nodal agency for procurement and distribution of foodgrains, and state agencies had procured 27.93 million tonnes of rice in the corresponding period of the previous marketing year, which runs from October to September. The Centre had procured a record 33.68 million tonnes of...
More »Centre allows export of wheat products for a year by Gargi Parsai
The Centre will allocate additional quantities of wheat and rice for ration card holders at rates lower than the Minimum Support Price (MSP), but higher that the issue price, under the public distribution system. The allocations would be made from June. At the same time, the government on Wednesday allowed export of wheat products like rava, sooji and maida, much in demand by expatriate Indians, for a year till March 31,...
More »More rice, wheat for ration card holders by Sangeeta Singh and Sanjiv Shankaran
An empowered group of ministers headed by finance minister Pranab Mukherjee decided to release an additional 500,000 tonnes of wheat and rice every month for sale to ration card holders for the next six months, according to agriculture minister Sharad Pawar. The move is aimed at reining in prices and curbing inflation and will cost the government an estimated Rs2,000 crore. The group met on Wednesday to discuss foodgrain availability...
More »Costly APL grain to rein in subsidy? by Mahendra K Singh & Nitin Sethi
Even as the government tries to meet the expectations of the Congress high command on the Food Security Bill, it is still trying tricks in the economist's books to keep its food subsidy bill as low as possible. While the Planning Commission has now accepted that it would include community kitchens and existing nutrition security schemes such as ICDS and mid-day meal programmes under the proposed Bill, it is also...
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