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Spare some big thought for foodgrain glut
18 May 2009, 0327 hrs IST, Prabha Jagannathan, ET Bureau
NEW DELHI: The new government will have to work out a foodgrain management policy focussed on clearing surplus stocks, especially those of wheat.
As on April 1, the Food Corporation of India (FCI) held nearly three times the minimum wheat stock requirement of 4 million tonnes. The new government can explore a few options in this regard: subsidise exports, push stocks through the public distribution system (PDS) and work on norms to increase buffer stocking.
While the PDS option is usually not favoured by governments in the first half of their stints in power as perceived gains dissipate by election time, the government could increase the capacity of the 2 million-tonne strategic long-term buffer.
While granaries are bursting at the seams, prices are plummeting. Wheat stocks are currently pegged at 13.4 million tonne, and the output this season is pegged at around 78 million tonne. Prices have plunged to Rs 1,020 a quintal (0.1 tonne) in the Capital as against a minimum support price of Rs 1,080 a quintal and to Rs 930 a quintal in UP.
Carrying cost per tonne of wheat is pegged at Rs 2,400 a tonne a year, going up every month by by Rs 200 a tonne. Wheat quality, already poor, will also deteriorate rapidly, making it fit only for fodder. With food subsidy already at around Rs 50,000 crore, no new government can afford to delay this decision.
Globally too, there is a glut, with the International Grains Council (IGC) projecting an eight-year increase in stocks. Prices have dipped as a result, and exports are unviable. Against a free-on-board price of $280-$250/ tonne at Kandla or Mundra for Indian wheat, better quality wheat sells between $185 a tonne and $220 per tonne.
Given the glut and exporters reluctance to pick up stocks, the commodities market regulator, the Forward Markets Commission on Friday approved the removal of the two-and-a-half-year-old ban on futures trading of wheat on Friday while leaving the ban on rice, urad and toor futures in place.
While rice stocks are also surplus at 21.6 million tonne on April 1 against a buffer norm of 11.2 million tonne the government will have to play cautiously. For one, global trade in the commodity is only a fraction of wheat trade. Further, sending out signals of huge exports could send global prices down further.
Spare some big thought for foodgrain glut- Agriculture-Economy-News-The Economic Times