Subramanian Panel Recommends Higher MSP

The Chief Economic Advisor (CEA) headed panel asked the Centre to immediately announce higher minimum support price (MSP) of gram (chana) to Rs 4,000 a quintal for rabi 2016 and Rs 6,000 a quintal for both urad and tur for kharif season 2017.

The report also recommended that the government should procure pulses on a war footing, create buffer stock of 2 million tonnes, push states to delist pulses from Agricultural Produce Market Committee (APMC) and promote development of GM technologies.

“Announce MSP of Rs 40/kg for gram for rabi 2016 and MSP of Rs 60/kg for both urad and tur for kharif 2017 (adjusted for inflation between 2016-17). MSP for other pulses should be increased by the same per cent as calculated in this report for tur, urad and gram,” it said.

It also prescribed subsidies to farmers for growing pulses.

CEA Arvind Subramanian submitted the report titled ‘Incentivising Pulses Production Through Minimum Support Price (MSP) and Related Policies’ to the Union Finance Minister Arun Jaitley.

The panel was set up in the wake of a recent surge in retail prices of pulses.

The report further suggested that the government procurement machinery should be in high gear to ensure procurement of kharif pulses at this season’s already-announced MSP.

The report pitched for encouraging development of GM technologies to boost pulse productivity and production.

Efforts to be made to give production subsidies to farmers for growing pulses in irrigated areas of about Rs 10-15 per kg to be given via DBT (direct benefit transfers).

It also said expeditious approval should be given to indigenously developed new varieties of pulses.

Furthermore, it suggested elimination of export ban on pulses and stock limits, and more generally, the use of trade policy to control domestic prices, which induces policy volatility, should be avoided.

It also said MSP should be increased to Rs 7,000 per quintal in 2018 when short duration kharif tur is ready for commercialisation.