Date: |
28-02-2011 |
Subject: |
Budget 2011: Expectations For Food And Commodities |
NEW DELHI: The government is likely to increase subsidies on food in a Feb 28 budget, a populist move that hurts public finances but promises political dividends for a ruling coalition trying to cool disquiet over high inflation.
Though the govt is moving away from its partly socialised economy after embracing free market reforms in the 1990s, removing subsidies has always been a tough call as they protect millions of poor voters who determine who governs.
Its policies have led to big stockpiles of rice and wheat, but the government has often wrestled with the question of how to distribute, free handouts defer long-term solutions and erratic monsoons and global supplies raise risk in cutting stocks.
As regional economies grapple with soaring inflation, the cost of food for families in Asia's third-largest economy has risen in high double-digit percentage terms for months, prompting the use of export bans and lower import duties. Here are some facts about subsidies and expectation on the budget on food as well as main commodities:
FOOD
The government provides cheap grains and lentils to nearly 180 million poor families through a public distribution system that will cost nearly $12.6 billion in the year to the end of March 2011, about 1 percent lower than the previous year.
The subsidy accounts for about 5 percent of the budget. When Finance Minister Pranab Mukherjee presents the budget, official sources say, he is expected to increase the food subsidy bill by more than 20 percent to about $15.5 billion with an eye on important state elections over the next year.
The government is also likely to spend more on increasing efficiency of storage and transport of staples. Excise or production tax on processed food could be cut. The government is drafting a food security law that would provide the poor with even cheaper grains, estimated to cost an additional $2 billion each year. But it is unlikely the budget would provide for it before the bill is passed.
-- Wheat and rice : The government may announce incentives such as an interest subsidy to boost storage capacity, routing such measures through Food Corp. of India, the main grain procurement agency. Overflowing bins have forced the government to store grains under tarpaulin, leading to some rot and decay.
-- Sugar: India, the world's top consumer and the biggest producer behind Brazil, has yet to decide on exports of 500,000 tonnes of sugar under the Open General Licence (OGL) scheme, and the budget may touch upon this issue. With focus now on containing high food prices, the government may announce steps to ease stock limits for traders and bulk consumers. India allows duty-free imports of sugar, despite bumper output in 2010/11.
-- Edible oil: The government may reduce the 7.5 percent import tax on refined vegetable oils in line with duty-free imports of crude edible oils. More than half of India's edible oil demand is met by imports.
The government may also explore options like curbing oilseed futures and cutting cooking oil taxes. India allows futures in edible oils and oilseeds and one option the government could explore as a further step to control prices is to curb futures trade as in 2008 when it briefly banned soyoil futures.
Source : economictimes.indiatimes.com
|