Category: Deccan Herald

Can Nano propel fertiliser reforms?

In this backdrop, let us look at the long-pending reform that was recommended by several committees in the past Successive governments have not initiated meaningful reforms in the fertiliser sector due to the significant gap between the cost of fertilisers and the price paid by farmers. Consider this: Currently, the cost of supplying a 45 kg bag of urea, the most widely used nitrogen fertiliser, is Rs 2650, against only Rs 240 paid by the farmer. In the case of diammonium phosphate, or DAP, the cost of a 50 kg bag is Rs 4000, against Rs 1350 paid by farmers. The excess cost over the price of Rs 2410 in the case of urea and Rs 2650 for DAP is paid...
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New gas pipeline tariff is flawed

There is no harm in helping areas at a locational disadvantage. But the problem arises when it is done using the tariff mechanism Under the zone-wise unified tariff for natural gas (NG) pipelines effective from April 1, 2023, and announced by the downstream regulator Petroleum and Natural Gas Regulatory Board (PNGRB), consumers will pay a uniform charge for transportation of NG within a tariff zone irrespective of their location. There are three tariff zones defined as per the distance from the gas source — up to 300 km, 300-1,200 km and greater than 1,200 km. This is a drastic shift from the extant system of tariff determination under which they pay different tariffs depending on the pipeline operator with whom they...
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No fertile future yet for farmers’ scheme

PM-KISAN’s benefits are being extended to many who don’t deserve them, but they elude the needy According to a statement made by the government in Parliament, the number of farmers receiving income transfers under the Pradhan Mantri Kisan Samman Nidhi (PM-KISAN) Scheme declined from 104 million during 2021-22 to 80 million during 2022-23. There has been a corresponding reduction in payments from Rs 67,032 crore during 2021-22 to Rs 57,646 crore in 2022-23. Launched by Prime Minister Narendra Modi on February 24, 2019, and made effective from December 1, 2018, PM-KISAN is a central sector scheme. Under it, the Union government gives Rs 6,000 a year to each farmer with a valid enrolment. It is paid in three instalments of...
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Fiscal target gliding away from its path

To reset the targets at a significantly relaxed level and then claim that fiscal numbers are well on track looks amusing In the Union Budget for 2022–23, Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman kept the Budget Estimate (BE) for the fiscal deficit (FD) at 6.4% of GDP. She described this as ‘advancing on the road to fiscal consolidation,’ citing the target of 4.5 % to be achieved by 2025–26 (this was announced in her budget speech for 2021-22). As per the revised estimate (RE) given while presenting the budget for 2023–24, she has precisely achieved this number. For 2023–24, she has kept the target at 5.9%, and for 2025–26, one would get the sense that the Union government is proceeding at the...
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Subsidies will derail fiscal deficit target

The shift from giving food at Rs 2/3/1 per kg to “free” would lead to an additional outgo of about Rs 13,000 crore In the Union Budget for 2023–24, Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman has stuck to the fiscal deficit (FD) target of 6.4 per cent of GDP in the revised estimate for 2022–23. She has kept the target for 2023–24 at 5.9 per cent. However, payments on major subsidies such as fertilisers and food, which account for a significant share of the Union government’s total expenditure, could play spoiler. Fertiliser subsidy—payments made to manufacturers or importers to cover the excess of the cost of production/import and distribution of fertilisers over the low maximum retail price (MRP) fixed by the government—was budgeted...
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Is free food welfare or a freebie?

During FY 2021–22, the economy rebounded, with the GDP registering a growth of 8.9% On January 1, 2023, the Union Government terminated the Pradhan Mantri Garib Kalyan Anna Yojana (PMGKAY). Accordingly, in the Union budget 2023-24, it has reduced allocation for food subsidy from Rs 287,000 crore during 2022-23 (RE) to Rs 197,000 crore. Beginning in April 2020, PMGKAY provided 5 kg of rice or wheat per person per month for “free” via the Public Distribution System (PDS), as well as 1 kg of pulses per family per month to around 820 million families. Run for three months initially, the scheme got six extensions till December 31, 2022. In the unprecedented situation triggered by the Covid-19 pandemic of large-scale job and income...
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Baby steps will not help rein in fertiliser subsidies

The government should pursue major reforms which can force suppliers to cut costs, stop leakages, and farmers to improve fertiliser efficiency Faced with a steep rise in international fertiliser prices caused by the Ukraine war, the Modi government has implemented two cost-cutting policies: (i) the “One Nation, One Fertilizer” (ON, OF) scheme, under which all fertiliser companies will sell all subsidised fertilisers under a single brand “Bharat”; and (ii) hiring an aggregator like GAIL India Limited to procure the fuel on their behalf or buying from gas exchanges and incentivizing companies The Centre controls the maximum retail price (MRP) of urea at a low level unrelated to the cost of production, which is higher. The excess of cost over the MRP...
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Delink pricing of natural gas, crude

An annual increase of $0.5 per mmBtu is consistent with its proposal to offer free pricing beginning January 1, 2027 In September 2022, the Ministry of Petroleum and Natural Gas (MPNG) formed a committee led by Dr Kirit Parikh to review the current pricing formula for domestically produced natural gas (NG) and make recommendations to restructure the formula in order to ensure “a fair price to the end consumer.” It has recommended linking the price of NG from legacy fields to the price of imported crude oil with a floor and ceiling. The floor price will be $4 per million British thermal units (mmBtu), and the ceiling price will be $6.5 per mmBtu, with an annual increase of $0.5 per...
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Nano urea and some tall claims

Can nano urea help in achieving the stated objective? Can it help to make a dent in the subsidy? The government spends huge sums on fertiliser subsidy — the likely expenditure during the current financial year being about Rs 2,50,000 crore. Credit: AFP Photo Launching an ambitious programme for the promotion of liquid nano fertilisers at the two-day ‘Kisan Samman Sammelan’ at the Indian Agricultural Research Institute (IARI) on October 17, Prime Minister Narendra Modi exuded confidence that it would help attain self-sufficiency in the crucial sector and help farmers enhance their income while substantially reducing the impact on the environment. Already, the Indian Farmers Fertiliser Cooperative Limited (IFFCO) — a major fertiliser manufacturer — is producing indigenously-developed nano urea at its Nano Biotechnology Research...
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Shun freebies, avoid bankruptcy

The reckless spending of taxpayers’ money on ‘freebies’ is neither recognised policy/custom nor sanctioned in a court of law. Credit: DH File Photo Hearing a PIL seeking directions against ‘freebies’ on August 3, the Supreme Court sought suggestions on the composition of a committee that can go into the issue “dispassionately” and make recommendations. It gave a sense that it is for Parliament, besides the Election Commission, to take the initiative to enact a law on curbing freebies. The Union government’s standards of financial propriety clearly lays down that “no authority shall exercise its powers of sanctioning expenditure to pass an order which will be directly or indirectly to its advantage; and the expenditure from public moneys should not be...
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