India gas price hike to trigger farm or food subsidy dilemma
Gas accounts for nearly 80% of the production cost of urea, a
nitrogenous fertiliser that consumes more than half of the $11 billion
India spends each year subsidising farmers for selling fertilisers at
below the cost of production. Photo: Bloomberg
Mumbai: India’s plan to double gas prices from
April threatens to hit government efforts to cut its fiscal deficit, as
higher production costs for the country’s most widely used fertiliser
force authorities to raise either farm or food subsidies.
The unwanted side-effect highlights the difficulties the world’s
second-most populous nation faces introducing market-oriented reforms
needed to kick-start the economy, while keeping spending in check.
India last year approved a hefty rise in gas prices to
around $8.40 per million British thermal units in a bid to boost returns
for local producers, spur investment in the industry and ease acute
power shortages.
Gas accounts for nearly 80% of the production cost of
urea, a nitrogenous fertiliser that consumes more than half of the $11
billion India spends each year subsidising farmers for selling
fertilisers at below the cost of production.
“The gas price hike will increase the annual urea production cost by Rs.10,000 crore ($1.6 billion),” said Satish Chander, director-general, Fertiliser Association of India (FAI).
Urea prices are set by the government, which has said any
increase in the cost of production would be met through a higher
subsidy for manufacturers. A less politically palatable alternative
would be to allow manufacturers to pass on the costs through higher
prices.
India consumes about 30 million tonnes a year of urea,
with local producers supplying 22 million tonnes and the rest imported,
FAI estimates.
Fearing a backlash from the politically influential farm
block, the government has already held urea prices well below those of
alternative potash and phosphate-based fertilisers whose producers have
been allowed to raise prices since 2010.
The Fertiliser Subsidy Bill has tripled in the past seven years. The government has allocated Rs.67,970
crore ($11.1 billion) in 2014-15, but Chander says the figures stands
well short of what’s needed given the impact of the gas price hike.
Food or fertiliser?
In a bid to avoid a potential ratings downgrade, Asia’s
third-largest economy aims to cut its fiscal deficit to 4.1% of GDP in
2014-15 by lowering fuel and fertiliser subsidies.
But even allowing the urea price to rise is unlikely to trim the government’s subsidy burden, analysts say.
Instead it will simply shift the onus from the ministry
of chemicals and fertilizers to the ministry of consumer affairs, food
and public distribution.
India buys food grains from farmers at a predetermined
support price and distributes them widely at discounted prices in an
effort to lower rates of malnutrition.
“The government fixes support prices considering input
costs. If the urea price goes up, then it has to raise the MSP (minimum
support price) of food grains,” said Harish Galipelli, vice-president research at Inditrade Derivatives and Commodities.
“The rise in food grain prices will be reflected in the
government’s food subsidy. It has promised to provide subsidised food
grains to the poor.”
Parliament last year backed a scheme to subsidise wheat and rice for two-thirds of India’s 1.2 billion people.
Farmers are already protesting the recent price hikes in
potash and phosphate-based fertilisers and are demanding a big rise in
prices for food grains, sugar cane and cotton.
This complicates the government’s task of raising urea
prices, which is also aimed at curbing excessive usage of the fertiliser
that threatens soil fertility.
“The price of every farm product should be raised in sync
with rising input costs. You can’t sell fertiliser at higher prices
without raising the support price,” said Raju Shetty, a farmers’ leader from the western state of Maharashtra and a member of Parliament.
The government last raised the urea price substantially in April 2010, but has since deferred any decision.
“The new government has to take a call on urea prices,” said a fertiliser ministry official, who declined to be named.
India’s election is due to start on 7 April and a new government will be formed only after mid-May.
“The decision is unpopular. I don’t think the new
government can take that decision in its first few months. It may even
defer the decision to 2015-16,” the official said. Reuter
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