Should We Fret Over Onion Prices
Should
We Fret Over Onion Prices?
Onion prices crossed Rs. 100, on
average, in most retail markets and got bought and sold at over Rs. 200 kg in
some places during last few weeks. Onion is attracting so much of public, media
and government attention as if India were in the midst of a major economic
crisis, bigger than slowing GDP or falling investments. Should the nation be
fretting over onion prices?
India produces around 230 lakh
tons of onion, on an average, 18 kg of onion per person a year. India produces
a little over 20% of total world onion production. It is second largest
producer after China which produces about 25% of total onions. Egypt and USA
are the third and fourth largest producers, each with about 3-4% of the global
share. India consumes only about 60-70% of the onions produced. Rest is either
exported, used otherwise or wasted. India is the largest exporter of onions in
the World earning over Rs. 3000 crore in 2018. China, United States of America and
Egypt are the three next largest exporters of onions earning about less than
half of what Indian exporters earn every year. India is also the lowest cost
producer of onion; onion prices in India usually are the lowest in the World.
If India produces so much of
onion, there is so much surplus of onions produced in India and India is the
largest exporter of onion in the world, why do we have prices shooting up
sometimes? Why do we also have this frenzy and angst forcing the Government to take
emergency measures like importing in a hurry and clamping down exports?
India has three crops of onion
in a year. Rabi crop, which is harvested in March - May is the largest. A
little over 150 lakh tons of total onion production of 235 lakh tons last year
was produced in this crop season. This crop is quite stable in terms of
production with very little variation from year to year (except in the years
when farmers decided to cut down on planting on account of extremely low prices
in the year before). This crop is ‘storable’ also and farmers have developed on
farm storage to stock this crop and release it gradually every month until
September-October. India has two smaller crops of onion - Kharif sown in July -
August and harvested in October - December
contributing about 30-35 lakh tons or about 15% of the annual crop production
and late Kharif, sown in December – January and harvested in January - March
producing 40-50 million tons on average or about 20% of annual production.
These two crops see varying production depending upon monsoons, floods,
draughts or other climatic catastrophes.
While bulk of the onion crop
is produced in Maharashtra, Madhya Pradesh and Karnataka (almost 2/3rd
of annual crop), the shrillest cries are heard in Delhi and other northern
cities when the onion prices shoot up. Wholesale onion prices in Delhi in first
five months (March-July) of the flush season (March-September) in last four
years (including current year 2019) averaged less than Rs. 10 a kg, recording
less than Rs. 8 per kg in almost half of these months. Onion prices start
rising from August (Rs. 35 a kg in 2015, Rs. 20 a kg in 2017, Rs. 17 a kg in
2019) in the wholesale markets of Delhi if trouble is anticipated in the Kharif
crop or the farmers decide to cut down on kharif showing having received very
low prices for their preceding Rabi crop. As the crop demand and supply
situation gets disturbed for ensuing months (situation gets more difficult if
the late Kharif crop also suffers) the prices start rising much more
menacingly. If the Kharif turns out to be better than anticipated in
September-October or there is good sowing for late Kharif, the onion prices
start reverting to their lower levels from November-December itself. In Delhi’s
wholesale markets, onion was sold at average price of Rs. 34.80 and Rs.38.11 in
2015, but declined to Rs. 21 in November and to less than Rs. 13 in December
2015. It did not happen this way in 2017. Prices started rising in August 2017
as per the usual pattern when there was trouble in monsoon rising from Rs. 7.95
per kg on average in July 2017 to Rs. 19.56 in August and then to Rs. 25.71 per
kg in November and Rs. 30.49 per kg in December 2017. This year again in 2019,
onion prices rose to Rs. 16.63 per kg in August and then to Rs. 28.46 in
September and to over Rs. 30 in October.
Pattern of onion prices over
last five years, and even earlier, is so stable and hence so predictable. The single
most responsible reason for rise in onion prices from August to December is
vagaries of weather. Traders might take advantage of the situation to make some
quick money but they are not responsible for demand-supply gap in months of
shortages, which is entirely weather related, sometimes accentuated by the farmers
receiving too low onion prices.
Onion is not the most
nutritionally rich or necessary food to have. It has about 90% of water and
some flavor. What is the problem if some people have to pay for higher prices
or have to cut down its consumption temporarily? Indian farmers receive, on
average, the lowest prices in the World for their onion produced. Why do we
have consumers unhappy some times and farmers generally?
Our distorted policies to
handle onion production, storage and exports-imports are primarily responsible
for this state of affairs.
Policy makers are primarily
driven by the instinct and intent to keep consumers happy. Consumers must
receive onions at less than rupees 15-20 per kg! To ensure this, we have
adopted a very restrictive and ad-hoc export policy. Two instruments are used-
fixing a minimum export price (MEP) and banning the exports outright. MEP instrument
is deployed as soon as there is a feeling that onion prices might shoot up
beyond 20 a kg in the wholesale markets. A MEP towards the higher end of global
prices is fixed to discourage farmers/traders to export. Whenever the wholesale
prices are likely to go beyond rupees 30-50, an outright export ban is put in
place. When prices crash, usually when new Rabi crop arrives, the restrictions
are relaxed.
This policy needs to be simply
junked. Free exports and imports of onions should be permitted without any MEP.
Government should guarantee that no ban on exports would be imposed. If this
policy is adopted, Indian farmers would actually increase the area under onion
crop in Rabi, develop more stable and strong export markets and gradually
realise global onion prices. Wholesale prices might move from the range of Rs.
8-10 in Delhi market to Rs. 12-15 during the months of March-July, but these
will be much more stable prices throughout the year. Open imports by farmers
groups and private traders (as against government agencies rushing to make some
desperate purchases when onion prices start shooting up and then try to provide
to select Delhi and some other urban consumers at a subsidized rates) will
ensure that onion prices for consumers even in the volatile season (September
to December) are stable and low.
Consumer retail inflation data
for October was released yesterday. Retail inflation rose to 5.54% in November 4.62%
in September. This was primarily on account of vegetable prices which shot up
to 36%. With weight of 7.46% in this retail index, vegetable price rise alone
contributed a whopping 2.68% of 5.54% increase or about 48% of total increase
in consumer prices. Excluding this, which is almost entirely driven by short
term factors, retail inflation is less than 3%.
Our sensitivity to inflation
is very high. As October inflation data crossed 4%, RBI decided to pause
cutting of policy interest rates. Core inflation in the wholesale price index
and retail inflation, excluding the vegetables, is very well within the range
of 2-6% inflation fixed by the Government in 2015, which the RBI is mandated to
ensure.
Paul Volcker, who tamed
inflation in the US, died last week on December 8, 2019.The inflation is almost
dead in many parts of the World. A number of advanced countries are spending
their fiscal and monetary firepower to somehow raise inflation to 2% a year. Yet,
they are not succeeding despite stacking up a lot of public debt and also
expanding the balance sheets of the Central Banks in pursuit of quantitative
easing. India has lot of growth to achieve for providing a decent quality of
life to its citizens. We got on to inflation targeting regime very late in the
day, when many countries, which adopted inflation targeting having seen
Volcker’s tighter monetary policies succeeding in taming US inflation of high
two digits, have by now increasingly discarded the same. The World today is
different than it was in 1980s. Agriculture and even industrial goods
production globally is in good balance of demand and supply, in fact for many
products supply exceeding the demand. There is unlikely to be excessive rise in
prices if we don’t follow a very loose monetary or fiscal policy. Some odd
episodes, like current onion episode, will keep on happening on account of
temporary factors. Let us not fret over these. Instead we should build stable agriculture
trade policies for serving farmers and also consumers interest. Let us focus
more on growth than inflation.
Subhash Chandra Garg
New Delhi December 13, 2019
Very right and realistic analysis, govt Must free the onion, and let the global market force decide it prise, in turn we shall be able to realise very good earnings from its export, as year after year there is imbalance in production to demand and suferer is always farmer.
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