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Rice prices expected to go up as production falls 6-7 million tonnes shorter

Press Trust of India September 18, 2022, 14:06:04 IST

However, officials believe that if steps like banning export and raising export duty succeed the price rise won’t go beyond 5-6 per cent and will keep enough stocks at disposal to mitigate any problem

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Rice prices expected to go up as production falls 6-7 million tonnes shorter

New Delhi: A 6-7 million tonnes shortfall in rice production due to a fall in paddy sowing area is likely to keep rice prices at elevated levels, adding to the inflationary pressure that the slowing economy is already grappling with.

Elevated food prices, including that of cereals, had led to retail inflation reversing a three-month declining trend, to touch 7 per cent in August.

Similarly, the wholesale price inflation, which declined to an 11-month low, also showed price pressures from cereals resulting from wheat output being impacted by severe heat waves in some parts of the country.

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In addition to this, the expectation of a lower paddy output - conservative by government estimates and higher if outside experts are to be believed - will keep inflationary expectations higher, experts and analysts believe.

Erratic June-September rainfall and delayed withdrawal of South-West monsoon rains have added to concerns over the paddy crop.

India’s rice production during the 2021-22 crop year, which ended June, stood at a record 130.29 million tonnes (MT) as against 124.37 MT in the previous year. The food ministry has projected a fall of 6-7 MT in rice production during this year’s Kharif season, which accounts for 85 per cent of the country’s total rice output.

However, some believe there is no cause for panic yet and that the buffer stock India maintains is enough to meet the demand for the public distribution system (PDS).

Also, the government intervention in the form of banning the export of broken rice and slapping a 20 per cent duty on the export of non-basmati and non-par boiled rice will help contain the situation.

These restrictions were imposed due to the price rise in rice and animal feed in the last one year.

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As per the data maintained by the Consumer Affairs Ministry, the wholesale prices have risen by 10.7 per cent to Rs 3,357.2 per quintal as on 14 September, from Rs 3,047.32 per quintal a year ago. The retail prices rose 9.47 per cent to Rs 38.15 per kg from Rs 34.85 per kg.

An article published in RBI’s latest bulletin said that there is “a resurgence of food price pressures, mainly stemming from cereals even as fuel and core components provided a modest measure of respite.”

Uneven spatial distribution of rain in September has set off an upsurge in prices of key vegetables, particularly tomatoes, it added.

“On the food front, furthermore, we need to brace for the impact of the predicted delayed withdrawal of the monsoon,” the RBI article said.

A monthly Economic Review released by the Finance Ministry on Saturday noted that inflationary pressures in India appear to be on a decline with a pre-emptive set of administrative measures by the government, agile monetary policy, and easing of international commodity prices and supply-chain bottlenecks.

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However, it cautioned, there is no “room for complacency on the inflation front as lower crop-sowing for the Kharif season calls for deft management of stocks of agricultural commodities and market prices without unduly jeopardising farm exports.”

The government officials feel there is no cause for panic as the measures in recent times were adequate to tide over the situation.

“I do not see any immediate big threat to domestic inflation in rice. Some increase in price is there because of an increase in MSP and other input costs like fertilisers and fuel. Some increase will be there when prices of all commodities are rising,” Niti Aayog member Ramesh Chand told PTI.

“Even if there is a 10-12 million tonnes (MT) drop in Kharif rice production, there won’t be a threat to domestic availability”, he asserted.

Stating that the government intends to control inflation by restricting exports, Chand said if it succeeds, then there won’t be a threat to inflation in rice going beyond 5-6 per cent which is “normal”.

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The latest CPI data showed that inflation in rice stood at 6.94 per cent in August, as against minus 1.2 per cent in the same month last year.

Agri-economist and secretary at National Academy of Agricultural Sciences PK Joshi said, “India is doing fairly well when compared to the global price rise”.

“The price rise in rice is “not a major concern” but exports have been restricted to meet PDS demand”, he said.

Under the National Food Security Act, the Centre provides 5 kg of food grains per person per month at Rs 2-3 per kg to 80 crore people.

Another 5 kg of food grains is supplied free of cost to 80 crore people under the Pradhan Mantri Garib Kalyan Anna Yojana (PMGKAY) from April 2020. The PMGKAY is ending in September and experts feel any further extension would be a “political decision”.

Rice production and procurement have been bumper in the last few years, leading to huge buffer stocks and exports.

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The buffer stock of rice was 47 MT, including rice equivalent to unmilled paddy as on 1 July, as against the buffer norm of 13.5 MT.

India, which commands a 40 per cent share in the global rice trade, exported 21.23 MT of rice in the 2021-22 fiscal as against 17.78 MT in the previous year. Exports were 9.51 MT in 2019-20 fiscal.

This year, the situation in paddy has changed because of the deficit monsoon in some states.

Paddy acreage is down 4.52 per cent to 399.03 lakh hectares (LH) as on 16 September of the ongoing Kharif, from 417.93 LH in the year-ago period. Sowing is lagging by 9.37 LH in Jharkhand, 6.32 LH in Madhya Pradesh, 3.65 LH in West Bengal, 2.48 LH in Uttar Pradesh and 1.97 LH in Bihar.

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