In Context
Recently, India banned wheat exports with immediate effect as part of measures to control rising domestic prices.
Previous crisis
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Present Situation
- India is the second-largest producer of wheat in the world, with China being the top producer and Russia the third-largest.
- After five straight years of a bumper wheat output, India has had to revise downwards its estimated production.
- The revised crop size is reported as 102 mmt.
Why has wheat production dwindled?
- Unprecedented heat waves across the north, west and central parts of the country have caused substantial loss to the yield this year.
- The “early summer” in states like Punjab, Haryana and Uttar Pradesh has also affected crop yields.
- Lower output coupled with strong export demand then pushed local prices higher, often above the government’s fixed procurement price.
- That prompted farmers to sell wheat privately instead of to the state, whose purchases to run welfare schemes slumped due to tight supplies.
Challenges faced by
- World
- Russia and Ukraine jointly account for about 30% of global wheat exports.
- Ukraine’s exports are severely hampered because the war has forced it to close its ports, while Russia’s exports have been hit by Western sanctions.
- Asian importers are likely to be in deep trouble.
- India was the Ukraine/Russia alternative, especially for feed wheat.
- India’s ban could drive global prices to new peaks given already tight supply, hitting poor consumers in Asia and Africa particularly hard.
- Agriculture ministers from the G7 industrialised nations immediately condemned India’s decision
- India
- The government wheat procurement has dipped, concerns are being raised about the stability of prices in the country and the availability of grain for internal consumption.
- Farmers across north Indian states are facing a shortage of dry fodder due to the wheat crisis.
Way Ahead
- Set up systems to get reliable and timely estimates of crops.
- The National Crop Forecasting system including “FASAL soft” will have to be reset.
- The much-hyped Drone-Artificial Intelligence- Blockchain technologies should be deployed to :
- Prepare a correct estimate of the crop well in time, for the government to plan and act ahead of any crisis.
- Reliable price data has always been a missing link in policy planning.
- Mandatory reporting of price (not just the APMC price data) of all large (limits can be defined) transactions are a must.
- The government should be aware of the quantum of private stocks, preferably in anonymised, aggregated formats.
- This needs legal backing. A provision to mandate the submission of anonymised stock data from all warehouses should be put in place.
- A robust system (drones, satellites, ground data) to monitor weather conditions like temperature, moisture stress, etc needs to be put in place immediately with a focus on key crops and major growing regions.
- The government has to ensure that the market price for the domestic consumer is not determined by private players .
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