The Other Side of India

About the state of rural India and unreported aspects of society which the market-driven media often ignores.

Monday, February 27, 2006

Who is benefiting from wheat Imports ?

I read a story appeared in Indian Express on Feb 6. (enclosed below) It says that government is importing wheat in the wake of shortage of supply in the country and subsequent price hike.

The story forced me think some points which i am sharing with you. please comment whether u agree with this or not......


1. Till last year we were surplus in food grains/wheat and govt. was thinking to make way out from the problem of storage and maintaining price level so that farmers do not have to sell their crop at low prices. In other words govt wanted to give good support price of wheat to farmers so it wanted to create a balance between demand and supply.

2. However when there were enough stocks of wheat why did the prices of wheat soar so high. Wheat sold at Rs 13 per kg even in MP, one of the highest wheat producing state.

3. Poor people in north India are heavily dependent on wheat as staple diet.

4. The government instead of raiding the premises of hoarders black marketers decided to import half a million tonnes of wheat.

5. This wheat will take minimum three months to arrive.

6. By this time poor farmers will have their crop ready but they will not get proper price for their produce because markets/govt stocks will already be flooded with imported wheat.

7. Ultimately the poor people will once again suffer. First farmers had to sell their wheat at low prices and later the poor people bought it for just double. The support price last year was around Rs 600 per quintal.

8. Interestingly the government delayed the import. Why did it not expect that there would be shortage ?

9. I read a statement by union agriculture secretary that delay in import of wheat took place due to non-availability of minister who could not sigh the file meant to import wheat. Secretary said that Sharad Pawar, union agri minister was busy in BCCI election hence file could not get his approval.


Now the conspiracy angle :


10. Why the delay in import, when just the ‘news’ of import could have stabilised the wheat prices.

11. Why hoarders were not raided.

12. Who is responsible for not telling the government (If it was so) that there could be shortage of wheat.

13. what happened to surplus food grains which the govt was boasting.

14. Why farmers are cheated again and again.

15. Or it was an artificial shortage created by some greedy politicans/people to import wheat.



Please read this ..........


Indian EXpress :

Plan to import wheat fails to cool down prices
SURESH P IYENGAR


MUMBAI, FEBRUARY 5: The government’s decision to import half a million tonne of wheat to tide over acute shortage of supply in the southern parts of India has failed to cool down prices in the commodity market. Till recently, the government had refused to accept the fact that rise in wheat prices was due to shortage in supply. Now, the move to import wheat, especially when the next rabi crop is due for harvesting, has raised many eyebrows.

The government has already estimated a wheat output of 74-75 million tonnes during the current Rabi season (July 2005-June 2006). The total area under wheat cultivation was up at 242.96 lakh hectares against 240.88 lakh hectares during the same period last year.

It will take over three months for the imported wheat to reach India by which time the new wheat harvest would reach markets and keep the prices artificially low.

The government is expected to procure 160 lakh tonnes of wheat during the financial 2007, some 13 lakh tonnes higher than the procurement last year. Additionally, the government has decided to release 1.5 lakh tonnes of wheat in the open market to control the prices.

Demystifying government decision to import wheat, Sushil Sinha, regional head, Karvy Commodities says, ‘‘The difference in prices between the southern and northern states were so high that some of the traders were purchasing wheat from north and pushing it in the southern states. They were making a killing even after adding the transportation charges. The government probably didn’t want the traders to exploit the situation’’.

The wholesale price of wheat in Delhi is Rs 966-978 per quintal, similarly at Hapur it was quoted at Rs 1012.50. In contrast, in southern states like Kerala, Karnataka and Tamil Nadu where wheat is not a staple food, prices were above Rs 1,200-1,300 per quintal.

Incidentally, the wheat imports will be done at the southern ports of Chennai, Kakinada, Tuticorin and Visakhapatnam and will be sold at a concessional rate in the open market to ease off the pressure. At an average price of $150 per tonne, the duty-free wheat import to be executed by State Trading Corporation of India (STC) would cost the government around Rs 38,000 crore. The government levies a 70 per cent duty on wheat imports, making it literally unviable for private traders to import the grain.

Wheat imports of this magnitude were last made by the government in 1998-99, when 1.5 million tonnes were purchased. Between 1996 and 1999, 46 lakh tonnes were imported. India imports wheat mainly from Canada, Australia and Argentina.

World trade in wheat is expected to rise by 2 million tonnes despite a fall in imports by China and Pakistan in the current year 2005-06 (July/June). However, higher anticipated imports by countries such as India, Iraq and Korea will more than offset the loss in global trade.

On the NCDEX, the February 20 contract for a quintal of standard wheat jumped Rs 21 on Friday to Rs 868 from Rs 847. The contract even touched a high of Rs 928 on January 23 when the wheat shortage was more pronounced.

------ End of Forwarded Message

The Other Side of India

The Other Side of India

Sunday, February 26, 2006

About a village i visited in 1999 just before loksabha polls

Too small to count yet it forms INDIA

MADHYA PRADESH: Bhopar in Panna district is just 450 km by road from
Bhopal, but several thousand kilometres away in terms of development. And
development is the issue raised by all political parties in successive
elections, only to forget it later.

BHOPAR VILLAGE; POPULATION: 500
CONSTITUENCY: DAMOH-PANNA
The villagers have to climb a 2,700 ft mountain (left) and trek 8 km
to sell the forest produce in Satna.

The twin village of Mehgavan-Bhopar is among the 57 outbacks on the
Shyamgiri range in the southeastern part of Panna, one of the most backward
districts in the state. It was only in 1992 that a school came up in this
village and the building lasted just five years! The hand-pumps installed
in this Rajgond-Yadav dominated area have never functioned properly.

The people's awareness about the elections is zero and they don't know who
Sonia Gandhi and Atal Bihari Vajpayee are. The area falls under Pawai
assembly segment of Damoh-Panna Lok Sabha seat. Sitting Samajwadi Party MLA
Ashok Vikram Singh alias Bhaiya Raja has represented the constituency twice
but has visited the area only once, that too in a chopper to celebrate New
Year's Eve. "That was the first time people saw bulbs aglow," said Singh.
The 57 villages in the ranges do not have power connection.

"The reason for the backwardness is the number of voters, which is only
5,500," said Singh. "Shyamgiri does not figure in political calculations."

BJP's sitting MP, Ramkrishna Kusmaria, has won the seat three times but has
visited the area only once, during the last elections. Shyamgiri does not
have even a proper health centre. The136 sq. km area is looked after by one
multi-purpose health worker.

The 51-km road to Shyamgiri from Pawai block, constructed by the miners,
can be used only in summer as one has to cross several small rivers without
bridges. "If you go there you will get stuck," warned the MLA.
The only other way is from the neighbouring Satna district, but then one
has to walk 8 km and climb a 2,700 ft mountain. The villagers have to carry
the sick several kilometres on cots for treatment. In most cases the
government doctors extract as much as Rs 50, much more than a villager's
daily earning, for treating a fever or a dysentery. The average life
expectancy is around 50 years. The main source of income is the money
generated from selling the forest produce.

"The politicians are to blame for the plight of the people," said social
worker Vir Singh Bundela, who has worked here for the last 30 years.
According to him votes are demanded on the same issues in successive
elections: water, road and hospital. Both Vikram Singh, SP's candidate for
the Lok Sabha seat, and Kusmaria say they have plans for Shyamgiri. While
Singh talks of a Rs 50-crore project proposal rejected by the Centre,
Kusmaria tom-toms the Rs 25 lakh he has spent on a bridge. The people, it
seems, have stopped believing them.