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Explained: Why were curbs placed on rice exports?

The announcement followed months of speculation that the government might take such measures to cool domestic food inflation. Retail prices of rice are up about 8 percent YoY, data collected by the price monitoring cell of the consumer affairs ministry show. Wholesale prices in July were 9 percent up YoY.

September 11, 2022 / 15:22 IST
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The Union government banned exports of broken rice and imposed a duty of 20 percent on exports of non-basmati rice amid fears of a continuing rise in retail prices of the cereal, driven by lower output of the Kharif crop due to uneven distribution of the southwestern monsoon that affected sowing.

The announcement came after months of speculation that the government might take such measures to cool domestic food inflation. Earlier this calendar year, export restrictions were imposed on wheat after domestic prices surged when large quantities were committed for overseas sales and the maturing Rabi crop was damaged by a rapid increase in temperature in March.

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Retail prices of rice have been creeping up for several months now, it is about 8 percent higher than a year ago, data collected by the price monitoring cell of the consumer affairs ministry show. Wholesale prices in July were 9 percent higher than a year ago. Fears of lower output this Kharif season could have exerted further upward pressure on prices of the grain in the open market if the tariff measures and restrictions on exports were not announced.

India is the largest exporter of rice, accounting for 40 percent of global shipments. The United States Department of Agriculture (USDA), in its August rice outlook report, estimated that India would export 22 million tonnes in 2023, up from about 21 million tonnes projected for the current year. This is more than the combined exports of rice from Thailand, Vietnam and Pakistan. The shipments may fall lower than these estimates due to the tariff measures.