There has hardly been a year in memory when farmers
have not thrown potato on the streets in protest against low prices. And yet,
the government has allowed import of potato for the first time ever. While the
official explanation is that the imports are to augment the domestic supplies
and curb inflation, the fact remains that production of potato has been almost
normal this year with an insignificant shortfall by a mere 2.3 per cent.
While the Ministry of Agriculture has directed Nafed to
float tenders to ensure shipments reach by the end of November, potato crop
from Punjab is expected to hit the market by the middle of November. The
domestic market would be flooded by time the imports come in and I wouldn’t be
surprised if farmers are once again forced to dump cartloads of potatoes on the
highways. I therefore don’t understand the economic rationale of allowing the
import of potato when there is hardly any drop in production. Experts say the Kharif crop has been good, and the
winter crop that is expected in mid-November onwards is also expected to be
normal. India is the third biggest producer of potato after China and Russia.
But then, under pressure from a strong lobby of
economists, food inflation is coming in as a handy excuse to open up the Indian
market for import of fruits, vegetables and milk products. This is exactly what
European Union is demanding under ongoing negotiations of the bilateral Indo-European
Union Free Trade Agreement.
The domestic potato chip, fries and flake industry is
now pressing for removal of the 30 per cent import duty on potato to make the
imports cheaper. Since Pakistan is not in a position to supply potato this
year, and had resorted to duty-free potato imports continuously from India from
March onwards with some 3,000 trucks crossing over daily from Wagah border,
potato imports into India are expected mainly from Europe and Australia. The
Economic Coordination Committee of Pakistan Cabinet has reportedly approved the
duty-free imports of potato from India till Nov 15.
How irrational food imports destroy domestic
production is evident from the way India deliberately encouraged edible oil
imports at the cost of its millions of oilseed farmers. These were small
holders in the dryland regions of the country for whom oilseeds was a cash
crop. Their livelihood has been snatched for the sake of economic benefit to
edible oil producers in Indonesia, Malaysia, Brazil and United States.
It is true that edible oil import bill has
multiplied over the past three decades. For the year ending 2012 (edible oil
year is from Nov 2011 to Oct 2012, for instance), the imports touched 9.01
million tonnes valued at Rs 56,295-crore. Between 2006-07 and 2011-12, edible
oil imports have risen by a whopping 380 per cent. Former Agriculture Minister
Sharad Pawar often used to stress on the need to increase oilseed production so
as to reduce the edible oil imports.
But what was not being told was that India
had attained near self-sufficiency in oilseeds production by 1994-95, importing
only 3 per cent of its edible oil requirements. After 1994-95, the import
tariffs were brought down systematically as a result of which the imports grew.
Against a provision of 300 per cent import duties, India allows zero tariffs at
resent. Imports are now more than 50 per cent of the domestic requirement. So
much so, that after having destroyed its own Yellow Revolution, a strong lobby
of economists has been battling for encouraging cultivation of environmentally-destructive palm oil
plantations.
from here by Devinder Sharma
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