HomeNewsBusinessMust be on guard till June next year as global food prices soar, says NITI Aayog's Ramesh Chand

Must be on guard till June next year as global food prices soar, says NITI Aayog's Ramesh Chand

Chand admitted that India cannot insulate itself from rising global food prices and can only take steps to moderate its effect locally.

August 18, 2023 / 12:42 IST
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Surge in vegetable prices and sustained cost pressures in key staples such as pulses and cereals drove India's headline retail inflation to a 15-month high of 7.44 percent in July.
Surge in vegetable prices and sustained cost pressures in key staples such as pulses and cereals drove India's headline retail inflation to a 15-month high of 7.44 percent in July.

The world is grappling with the impact of a surge in the price of essential commodities with Russia blocking Ukraine from shipping grain to the world, India restricting non-basmati white rice exports, and the fear of lower supply of rice from the world's largest producer, China. Given that international food markets could remain turbulent for some time, India needs to stay on guard on rising global food prices at least till the first quarter of the next financial year or June 30, 2024, said NITI Aayog member and agricultural economist Ramesh Chand.

Chand acknowledged that in a connected global economy, India cannot entirely insulate itself from the impact of rising food prices in world markets, and can only take appropriate measures to moderate its effect on domestic markets.

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"If internationally prices are rising, say , 20 percent, we can take measures to limit that to about 10 percent. In an integrated world, there are so many ways prices find a way to enter domestic markets. You may not export wheat, but there is atta, and if not atta, there is bread that can go from India to other countries. If not bread, it could be cookies," Chand told Moneycontrol in an interview, adding that India can only limit the transmission of international prices to local markets.

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