HomeNewsOpinionRollback Under Duress: How reform attempts in the sugar and fertiliser sectors have fared

Rollback Under Duress: How reform attempts in the sugar and fertiliser sectors have fared

Attempts to free sugar mills from government control ended because the mills couldn’t cope with populist sugarcane pricing and production gluts. Decontrol of prices of phosphatic and potassic fertilisers was reversed after a decade of moderate success because of global supply shocks. Complete deregulation will have to wait for a developed India

March 20, 2024 / 13:36 IST
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Agriculture
The two examples of sugar and fertiliser show the limits of complete decontrol of the agriculture sector.

Now that general elections have been declared and no policy decisions are expected till the formation of new government, it is time to look at the reforms in two major sectors – sugar and fertilisers. Both have seen rolling back of reforms. This raises a question as to whether it is premature to expect complete deregulation in India’s agriculture and food sectors.

Sugar Sector

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In April 2013, the UPA government decided to abolish the levy system on sugar under which the sugar mills were required to deliver at least 10 percent of their production to the Government. The price fixed for levy sugar was almost always less than the market price. The Government provided the levy sugar to state governments for distribution under the public distribution system (PDS). The sugar mills bore a burden of Rs 1,800 crore to Rs 2,500 crore on account of levy sugar.

The Government decided that instead of levy sugar, it will provide a cash subsidy to the states for purchasing sugar from the open market. The Government paid a fixed sugar subsidy of Rs 18.50 per kg to the states and they were asked to charge Rs 13.50 per kg from the Antyodaya Anna Yoiana (AAY) beneficiaries.