Why farmers will not abondon Sugarcane despite massive arrears?
Why farmers will not abondon Sugarcane despite massive arrears?
Returns from cane most attractive for farmers
Farmers stick with
the water-guzzling crop despite massive arrears as alternatives are far less
remunerative.
By: FE Bureau |
New Delhi
Farmers in Uttar
Pradesh, the largest producer of sugarcane and sugar, had average net returns
of Rs 62,116/hectare between 2012-13 and 2014-15. (Reuters)
For years, farmers have protested against massive cane arrears and yet
they have not shunned cane. The reasons are not far to seek. As the Cabinet
committee on economic affairs (CCEA) prepares to decide on the benchmark prices
of Kharif crops, an FE analysis of key cane-growing states suggests net returns
from key competing crops are only a fraction of what farmers earn from cane, in
some cases less than a tenth.
Data by the Commission for Agricultural Costs and Prices (CACP) show the
average net return of farmers in Maharashtra from sugarcane was as much as Rs
59,452 per hectare in the three-year period ending 2014-15. This was over 10
times the net realisation from cotton and gram put together.
Since sugarcane takes at least one year in Maharashtra to be harvested,
a farmer can grow two crops, one each in kharif and rabi season, in the absence
of cane.
Growers of cotton, the major kharif crop in the state, had net returns
of Rs 2,949/hectare while those of grams saw net returns of only Rs
2,291/hectare. The net returns are calculated on the basis of the ambitious C2
cost of production. It factors in actual paid-out costs, plus value of family
labour, rent of owned land and interest on owned capital.
In Maharashtra, the returns from the two alternative crops are so meagre
that many farmers want to get into sugarcane. Last month, water resources
minister Nitin Gadkari had said that it was practically difficult for sugarcane
farmers in Maharashtra to abandon the water-guzzling crop and shift to other
crops, as the latter are less remunerative.
Sugarcane is grown where there is irrigation, while the state has
abysmally low irrigation coverage of about 18%.
Farmers in Uttar Pradesh, the largest producer of sugarcane and sugar,
had average net returns of Rs 62,116/hectare between 2012-13 and 2014-15. But
the less fortunate farmers who grew paddy and wheat in kharif and rabi season
respectively, got a total of only Rs 14,827/hectare as net returns from both
the crops.
The government will next week raise the fair and remunerative price
(FRP) of cane, maybe to `275 per quintal for 2018-19 season
(October-September), against `255/quintal this year. However, in a potential
relief to mills already struggling with exorbitant cane costs, the CACP has
suggested that the government tighten criterion for farmers to get premium for
supplying quality cane. Assuming that the pan-India recovery rate remains the
same (10.8%) as this year, the cane FRP will effectively rise just 2.4% per
quintal to Rs 297 in 2018-19 — lower than over 14% hike in the effective FRP a
year before.
The CACP has calculated the net return by deducting the C2 cost of
production from the gross value of output (GVO) and the gross return is defined
as GVO minus A2+FL cost. The gross value of output is estimated at the
prevailing market prices during harvest season in the village/cluster of
villages where the crop is grown and harvested.
“A single formula for MSP is not the appropriate decision, as it has
completely ignored demand side and other factors. Price fixation is an
important tool for correcting the cropping pattern as happened in case of
pulses in recent times,” said former agriculture secretary Siraj Hussain.
“The government is welcome to
fix MSP at 50% over cost, but if other reforms are not undertaken immediately,
this may become a liability for the government as India will lose
competitiveness in the global market,” said food policy expert Vijay Sardana.
By Prabhudatta
Mishra and Banikinkar Pattanayak
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