Pulses, oil seeds, fruit output to lag demand till at least 2030-31: report
- November 27, 2023
- Posted by: OptimizeIAS Team
- Category: DPN Topics
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Pulses, oil seeds, fruit output to lag demand till at least 2030-31: report
Subject : Geography
Section: Economic geography
Context:
- India’s output shortfalls vis-a-vis demand for the key protein source (pulses), as well as edible oils and fruits, are expected to persist or even widen over the next seven years, as per a new research report by agricultural economists.
Details of the report:
- Report title: ‘Prospects of India’s Demand and Supply for Agricultural Commodities towards 2030’
- Published by: National Bank for Agriculture and Rural Development (NABARD) and the Indian Council for Research on International Economic Relations (ICRIER).
- The report reiterated the recommendation of a 2012 report from the Commission for Agricultural Costs and Prices (CACP) to raise the import duty whenever the import price of crude palm oil falls below $800 per tonne to protect Indian producers. However, it also added that attaining self-reliance in water-intensive and long gestation crops like oil palm may not be worth pursuing as a sustainable goal either.
Key Findings:
- The food deficit will lead to high import bills in the long run.
- Commodities like oilseed, pulses and fruits are expected to experience a supply and demand gap in the coming years.
- Therefore, there is a need to increase the level of production and productivity of oilseeds, pulses, and fruits since their demand in the future shows an increasing trend.
- Reason for rising demands:
- As per capita incomes rise, the consumption basket of people tends to diversify towards nutritious and high-valued commodities, including fruits and vegetables and dairy products and away from staples such as rice and cereals.
- So demand growth for non-cereals and high-valued commodities is expected to exceed the population growth rate and cereal commodities’ growth in coming years.
- Oil seeds production is expected to rise to around 35 to 40 million tonnes (MT) by 2030-31, with the gap between demand and supply likely to expand to 3 MT by 2025-26 and 6 MT by 2030-31, even if per capita incomes rise just 5.1%.
Report recommendations:
- There is a need for policy attention to ensure a balance between domestic production and the absorption of these commodities, diversification towards high-value commodities that require major investments in market infrastructure, processing, and cold storage and warehousing facilities to build an efficient and reliable value chain.
- Such measures can significantly reduce food wastage.
Source: The Hindu