Sugar’s Bitter Policies

Thursday 18 February 2010, by Kobad
Ghandy<http://www.mainstreamweekly.net/auteur532.html>

*The following article on the present rise in prices of sugar has been
written by Kobad Ghandy, the CPI (Maoist) leader now lodged in Ward No. 8 of
Tihar Jail No. 3. Though suffering from prostrate cancer and incarcerated in
prison he retains an alert mind as is reflected in the following article
sent specially for publication in this journal.*

At Rs 50 per kg sugar prices have never been so high. With sugar prices
soaring, prices of all sugar linked products—sweets, mithais, tea etc.—have
also sky-rocketed. Not only will festivals for most become a drab affair,
children’s wailing for the little sweet or toffee will get louder. At the
rate at which sugar prices have been rising it will be out of reach of many
a poor and middle-class life.

One would have thought, given the free-market mantra of the rulers, that
high sugar prices would at least convert into higher prices for the
producers—the fifty million sugarcane farmers. But that was not to be; the
so-called free market functions only to benefit big business, traders and
politicians. In this case both the producers and consumers are being crushed
by the cane and sugar pricing policies of the government dictated by the
millers and international sugar cartels.

It is indeed a policy that has resulted in windfall profits for a few at the
cost of millions of farmers and crores of consumers. And the solution being
suggested—huge duty free imports—will help no one except the importers, the
foreign traders and the bureaucrats/politicians who will get their
commissions on each order. The entire people of our country are made to
suffer so that a few may make fortunes. This is indeed tragic.

And while the entire people suffer the politics of sugar is diverting the
entire issue with the Central and UP governments throwing the blame on each
other.

Farmers being Crushed

In October last year the Ministry of Consumer Affairs (Food and Public
Distribution) changed the pricing regime for sugarcane and introduced a Fair
and Remunerative Price (FRP) mechanism, replacing the Statutory Minimum
Price (SMP) system that was prevailing till then. Soon after passing the
ordinance the Central Government declared an FRP to the millers to purchase
sugarcane at Rs 130 per quintal, when, according to the NAFA (National
Alliance of Farmers’ Association), the input cost of one quintal of
sugarcane is roughly Rs 233.5 per quintal. This FRP therefore amounts to a
massive loss to the farmer.

Immediately after the announcement, farmers (from UP) took to the streets
stopping rail and road traffic. They marched to Parliament. They seized
trains that sought to bring imported raw sugar and prevented them from
reaching the mills. Some took the extreme step of self-immolation. Others
burnt their crop. With the rabi season approaching many resorted to distress
sales, selling their crop to local gur manufacturers at Rs 155 per quintal.
Under pressure from the farmers the UP Government banned the import of raw
sugar.

According to the new order, the FRP shall be fixed by the Central Government
from time to time. It also specified that any other authority fixing a price
for the crop above the FRP would have to bear the difference. (The latter
point was retracted after the farmers’ march to Parliament.) The practice so
far was for States such as UP, Tamil Nadu, Punjab and Haryana to declare the
State Advised Price (SAP) that mills are required to pay farmers. This was
usually higher than the SMP which was announced by the Central Government on
the basis of the cost of cultivation estimated by the Commission for
Agricultural Costs and Prices (CACP).

As it is, for a number of years, sugarcane growers have been squeezed by the
low prices paid by the millers and the spiralling input costs. This has led
even to many suicides of sugarcane farmers who had at one time earned a good
amount for the crop. In fact in the four years from 2004-05 to 2008-09 the
SMP for sugarcane barely rose from Rs 79 per quintal to Rs 81 per quintal
while input costs increased phenomenally. In addition, the millers cheat the
farmers in varied ways—weighing, recovery rate etc. So it is not surprising
that sugar production dropped drastically from 27.8 million tonnes in
2007-08 to 16 million tonnes last year. In the coming year production is not
likely to be more than 15 million tonnes.

The government did not create a buffer stock in 2006-07 and 2007-08 when
production was at its peak. In 2006 when international prices were high (Rs
20,680 per tonne) and local prices were low (Rs 13,000 per tonne) the
government banned exports. At that time due to large stocks and ban of
exports the millers harassed the farmers paying them late. In 2007-08 when
international prices crashed to Rs 13,000 per tonne the government exported
68 lakh tonnes of sugar even though sugar production was dropping. Later
when there was shortage the government imported sugar at Rs 10-35 per kg.

It is these shortsighted policies of the government which have played havoc
with the lives of the sugarcane farmers. In its report for 2008-09 the CACP
warned the government that unless it raised the SMP for sugarcane the net
area under the crop would continue to fall. But the government could not be
bothered. They expect the millers will import raw sugar and continue to make
money. The area under sugarcane cultivation dropped from 4.38 million
hectares last year to 4.21 million hectares—that is, a drop of about 1.5
lakh hectares in just one year. Farmers are shifting away from sugarcane
cultivation.

Consumers Robbed

Sugar prices have tripled in the last one year from Rs 17 per kg a year back
to Rs 50 today. In just the last four months it has risen by over 40 per
cent from Rs 32 per kg. Notwithstanding the claims of the Agriculture
Minister, sugar prices are unlikely to drop. When production is estimated at
a mere 15 million tonnes and consumption at 23 million tonnes without a
single kg of buffer stock (compared to 10 MT at the beginning of last year),
the price will be determined by the cost of imports. Given the shortfall, a
minimum of eight million tonnes will have to be imported.

The raw sugar import cost to the miller will not be less than Rs 38 per kg.
With such high costs, what the consumer has to pay is not likely to be below
Rs 50 per kg. And with India entering the international market with huge
purchases, the international prices are only likely to go up—expected to be
up to Rs 70 per kg.

The question that arises is that when the millers are paying Rs 13 per kg to
the farmer (FRP rate with recovery at 10 per cent) why should sugar be so
expensive? Even if we calculate that for every kg of sugar produced the
transportation and processing charges come to Rs 5, the cost of production
would be a maximum of Rs 18 per kg. If we add another one-third as profit
the selling price comes to Rs 24. Then if we count the wholesaler’s/
retailer’s profit sugar should not cross a maximum figure of Rs 30 per kg.
Then why Rs 50? Even if they give the sugarcane grower the rate that is
remunerative—say, Rs 23 per kg or Rs 230 per quintal for sugarcane—the
maximum price to the consumer will come to Rs 40 per kg. This would be still
less than the cost of imported sugar or raw sugar.

So there is no reason for sugar prices to sky-rocket as millers continue to
pay a price lower than the remunerative price. Though this may vary from
State to State the plight of the farmer in the two main sugarcane growing
States—UP and Maharashtra—is pathetic. In Maharashtra, sugar mills are
cooperatives dominated and controlled by powerful politicians like Sharad
Pawar. In Maharashtra, every farmer is tied to a particular cooperative mill
and is not free to sell it to any other. So they are at the mercy of the
cooperative bosses who keep the prices of sugarcane low. In UP many mills
are owned by big business houses like Birla, Bajaj etc.

Depending on imports is no solution to the sugar problem—whether shortage or
high prices. The only solution must be to promote sugarcane production by
investing in agriculture and subsidising the farmer. In this way not only
would the farmer and rural economy flourish, the consumer too would get
sugar at a reliable price.

Need for a Pro-active Agrarian Policy

With nine lakh tonnes of imported sugar stuck at the ports since the last
month due to the UP Government’s ban on processing it, the Centre has been
blaming the Mayawati Government for the high sugar prices. The Mayawati
Government, on the other hand, instead of announcing a high SAP, has clamped
cases on the millers under the Essential Commodities Act in order to share
the booty made by them. The plight of the millions of sugarcane farmers and
crores of consumers is not on the mind either of the Congress or the BSP.
They are interested in only extracting their share of the windfall profits
being made by the millers, cooperatives, big traders and hoarders.

The only policy that would benefit both the producer and consumer is for the
government to invest heavily in agriculture and subsidise sugarcane
production. Sugarcane production requires large quantities of water, so
irrigation projects should be its first focus. Unfortunately the government
has systematically been cutting investment in agriculture. Rural development
expenditure of the government averaged 14.5 per cent of the GDP in the
1985-90 period. This dropped to eight per cent in the early 1990s and since
1998 it has dropped even further to a mere 5.6 per cent of the GDP. In real
terms, there has been a reduction of about Rs 30,000 crores annually in
development expenditures on average in the first five years of this century
compared to the pre-reform period.

When investment in agriculture should be increasing as it is there that the
bulk of our population live, the above figures indicate a massive reduction
with disastrous consequences. Rather than become dependent on imports and
thereby compromise the food security of the country, the government needs to
invest heavily in agriculture (with focus on irrigation) to boost the
production of sugarcane and other crops.

To solve the sugar/sugarcane problem the government needs to increase
investment in irrigation, subsidise input cost (fertiliser, pesticide,
electricity) and ensure a remunerative price is paid to the farmer. To
maintain consumer prices it should put a halt on the profiteering, hoarding
and illegal methods of the millers and subsidise sugar particularly for the
poor. If the government can announce a massive bail-out to the three-to-four
oil companies and Air India, why does it shy away from bailing-out 50
million farmers and a few crore masses? The amounts being suggested to the
three-to-four oil companies and Air India run up to Rs 20,000 crores, a
lesser amount would be needed for the millions of sugarcane farmers.
http://www.mainstreamweekly.net/article1899.html

<http://www.mainstreamweekly.net/article1899.html>Adv Kamayani Bali Mahabal
-- 
"After a war, the silencing of arms is not enough. Peace means respecting
all rights. You can’t respect one of them and violate the others. When a
society doesn’t respect the rights of its citizens, it undermines peace and
leads it back to war.”
-- Maria Julia Hernandez


www.otherindia.org
www.binayaksen.net
www.phm-india.org
www.phmovement.org
www.ifhhro.org




-- 
"After a war, the silencing of arms is not enough. Peace means respecting
all rights. You can’t respect one of them and violate the others. When a
society doesn’t respect the rights of its citizens, it undermines peace and
leads it back to war.”
-- Maria Julia Hernandez


www.otherindia.org
www.binayaksen.net
www.phm-india.org
www.phmovement.org
www.ifhhro.org

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