The Signal - Cracked farms and bent forks
Cracked farms and bent forksThe late economist, Abhijit Sen, tried to help reform India’s farm to fork policies. It remains unfinished business. If unchanged, the dining tables of both farmers and consumers will remain frugalGood morning! A big hello to readers who signed up this week. Welcome to The Intersection, The Signal's weekend edition. This weekend we talk about why we pay through our noses for food but most farmers who grow it remain poor. Also in today’s edition: we have curated the best weekend reads for you. If you enjoy reading us, why not give us a follow at @thesignaldotco on Twitter and Instagram. Political expediency often trumps economic sense. It is particularly so in the mottled Indian agrarian landscape where the urgency to balance the interests of the farmer and consumer, both “food price-sensitive” voters, leads to absurd outcomes. In the most recent instance, a sudden reversal of export policy wiped out all competition, leaving the field with unencumbered pricing power to just one company. Earlier, the government withstood a politically costly farmers’ agitation for over a year in the hope that it could push through reform in agricultural policies designed for another era. But in the end it merely rolled over and took the easy way out to stop food prices from rising: banned exports and banned futures trading in agricultural commodities. That was to assuage inflation-wary middle-class consumers. To please farmers, it raised the Minimum Support Price (MSP) for a variety of crops. The policies were so warped that domestic prices of cereals were almost always higher than international prices. That meant that even if India had excess production, it was never able to export wheat and rice. That changed when Russia invaded Ukraine and the world’s most sought-after wheat disappeared from global markets. Indian wheat is of inferior quality compared to Ukraine’s and fetches a much lower price. But it was suddenly in demand because of the shortage created by war. It was a rare occasion when Indian wheat commanded a better price globally than in the local market. No other commodity, except Basmati rice, has that distinction. Last year, India paid ₹10 per kg of sugar to exporters just to make the sweetener competitive in the international market. The MSP WringerThe political balancing act of keeping prices low for consumers but high enough for farmers to cover their costs is primarily based on MSP. It was introduced in the 1970s to lure farmers into adopting lab-developed high-yield varieties of grain. The MSP was meant to overcome farmers’ hesitancy in trying out the new seeds for fear of losses. That did lead to the Green Revolution and new records in food production and the shortages turned into surplus. But what was an incentive turned into a politically-guaranteed sinecure for farmers and a millstone on the government’s neck. It merely encouraged more farmers to cultivate cereals while ignoring oilseeds and pulses, which the country ends up importing. The value of imported cooking oil is second only to crude oil. Unfortunately, the debate on MSP has been limited to determining the cost of farming and what should be the mark-up allowed to farmers. The National Commission on Farmers headed by agriculture scientist MS Swaminathan recommended covering all input costs, including the labour put in by the farmer’s family and rent for her land and interest on capital employed by her and then adding a 50% profit to it. Not very different from an entrepreneur determining the price of his product, including the profit he has to make. It is a good sell for political parties to make for votes but neither is it good for consumers, nor for the government. For consumers, it will jack up the prices of a range of foods. The government will end up with a bloated food subsidy bill which anyway gets paid from taxpayers’ money. The Swaminathan commission also found that India’s productivity in food production is low. It produced less than half the amount of rice per hectare compared to China. Wheat productivity was about two-thirds that of the neighbour and maize’s was one-third. The Commission recommended several steps, including heavy public investment in farming, land reforms, soil testing, loans and insurance for farmers and futures markets. None of it has happened at scale. MSP has eroded farming efficiency and competitiveness. Had an efficient market developed, the food retail competition unleashed by the likes of Reliance, Amazon and Big Basket would have egged on farmers to increase production and lower costs. Direct purchases would have reduced intermediation costs and hence prices of food on shop shelves and online shopping carts. Instead, the taxpayer ends up paying for the subsidies that help feed fellow citizens. Food subsidy in India is the difference between the Food Corporation of India’s costs and its revenues. It spends most of its money buying grain at ever-expanding MSPs. Its costs also include food handling, storage, pilferage and spoilage. It also pays mandi fees and other levies to states as well. It paid out more than ₹11,300 crore just under these heads in the most recent crop year, 61% of which went to Punjab and Haryana, where most cereal procurement takes place. The advice of a 2001 high level committee headed by economist Abhijit Sen, which was tasked with evolving a long-term grain policy to not reimburse state taxes on food purchases, remains unheeded. Securing FoodIs there a way out of this conundrum? Can productivity be benchmarked to global standards? One way is to abolish the assorted subsidies on irrigation, power, fertiliser, cost of interest and insurance, and abnormal procurement prices and pay the amount in cash to farmers. It leaves the farmer with the incentive to identify the crop best suited for his soil and water availability, factoring in the prevailing and likely future prices in the market. Many farmers now growing rice because water and power are free and fertiliser is cheap would likely switch to growing fruit, flowers or edible oil crops, buying the best seeds, other inputs, expertise and insurance. It would incentivise large retailers and agri-startups to find technology solutions to develop productivity tools and information sharing systems to improve productivity. New go-to-market strategies could evolve. The government must buy only enough grains to maintain its buffer stocks. Exports and imports must be rid of quantitative restrictions and subjected only to predictable tariffs variable within a range to ensure domestic availability at reasonable prices. Farmers must have access to physical markets, forward markets and climate-controlled storage where standardised quality produce can be converted into warehouse receipts that are already recognised as negotiable instruments. Linking the farmer to the end consumer with minimal layers of intermediation, including food processing and swift transport of perishables, would allow farmers to get a larger share of the final price paid by consumers. This is not just doable, but also an inevitability as more Indian workers move from farms to other industries. (TK Arun is a Delhi-based journalist and formerly Editor, Opinion, at the Economic Times.) ICYMIBaying For The Badge: You can’t have clout if you don’t have a blue tick. And some people are willing to go all the way for it. We’re talking paying up to $100,000 and having musicians’ fake profiles on Spotify, Apple Music, and Google… just to be verified on Instagram. This gripping ProPublica investigation unmasks the person at the helm of the burgeoning black market for social media verification. Teaser: Indian media makes a guest appearance. Erdogan Versus The Fourth Estate: Turkey, spiralling from 80% inflation and a battered lira, also has a dictatorial president to contend with. Nowhere is this more evident than in this Reuters report, which details Recep Tayyip Erdogan’s stranglehold on Turkish media. The country’s media regulator is penalising independent media, censoring election updates, and keeping a watchful eye on how Turkey is portrayed by the international press. And that’s just the beginning. Burn Notice: Maria Adela Kuhfeldt Rivera mingled with the crème de la crème of Neapolitan society, NATO officials, Bahrain’s prime minister, and the editor of Cosmopolitan UK. She was a high-flying Peruvian jewellery designer… or so everyone thought. This must-read investigation by a consortium of international publications reveals that Rivera was in fact a Russian black-ops agent. Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy, anyone? Dystopia: Living up to 120 years may just become a reality, according to a startup called Longevity House which wants you to, well, live longer. ‘Biohacks’ include yoga, probiotics and mood-enhancing supplements, forest bathing, and looking into each other's eyes for a minute. Did we mention that smoking the secretions of a giant monkey frog is also in the picture? This story in Toronto Life profiles Michael Nguyen, the man behind Longevity House. Another One Bites The Dust: It's Fahrenheit 451 all over again. At least 1,145 books have been banned across US schools between July 2021 to March 2022. Books penned by the LGBTQ community and ethnic backgrounds are victims of the ban. “Sexually explicit content” is often cited as a reason, making it difficult to contest the restriction. But banning books only makes them popular. Where does the First Amendment figure in all this, though? This story in the Grid lays it down. Breaking In: “This won’t just be the Olympic debut of a sport. It will be the Olympic debut of a spectacle.” More apt lines couldn’t have been written about the inclusion of breaking or break dancing at the Paris Olympics in 2024. Breaking, which remained a street expression of pent-up energy of broken youth, found its global community on YouTube and TikTok, the new-age homes for subcultures that markets can no longer ignore. And the Olympics is an ageing show struggling with declining youth patronage. The inclusion of breaking in the games, it is hoped, will bring more monetizable (read young) audiences to the arenas and, more importantly, to the small screen. Enjoy The Signal? Consider forwarding it to a friend, colleague, classmate or whoever you think might be interested. They can sign up here. We recently got funded. For a full list of our investors, click here. Want to advertise with us? We’d love to hear from you. Write to us here for feedback on The Signal. If you liked this post from The Signal, why not share it? |
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