A-Z OF INDIAN FOOD
SECURITY BILL/FSO
Part 4
TEJINDER NARANG
SYSTEMATIC DEFICIENCIES
Due to
anticipation of FSB/FSO for last four years, about 77 million tons (mt)-( $38
billion)- of grains are hoarded in June 2013 under the supervisory control of
Food Ministry. Off take has been lower than allocations—indicating
demand/takers of subsidized grains are absent, while the Government is
thrusting excessive procurement and storage irrationally (ref. charts below).
With tightness in the market, 10% average rate of cereal inflation annually in
consumer prices (in May2013, 15% in rural areas &21% in urban areas) should
not come as a surprise. Role of private
trade stands marginalised by the nationalisation of grain acquisition policies,
while the right way forward will be for more participation of private trade and
less of Government.
As of June, buffer norms mandate storage of
32mmt. CACP estimates 47 mt will be adequate under FSB/FSO . In July 2013,
surplus of( 77-47)= 30mt ($12 billion) is the sunk cost that needs to be
salvaged to fill in twin deficits—CAD and fiscal. 11million tons out of
16million tons of new wheat crop of 2013-14 is exposed to rain in CAP
warehousing in Punjab and Haryana.
Comptroller and
Audit General (CAG) in its Performance Audit (2007-12)
of Storage Management and Movement of Food Grains in Food Corporation of India
(FCI) has underscored some of the major
systematic deficiencies in Public
distribution System(PDS) in its 7th
report of 2013. Off-take/lifting of food
grains during 2007-12 were 70-80% of the allocations made by the Central Govt.
This shows lack of real demand and that the allocations are overestimated by
Union Government. Even lower procurement by FCI/agencies is more than
sufficient as lifting is much less than the tonnages acquired, replies the
Government. Implications--There is a gross overestimation of demand by the
policymakers, leading to aggressive procurement, creating shortages the market
and fuelling food inflation. There could be hyper overestimation under FSO that
may lead to larger unused inventories and wastages.
STORAGE SPACE LACKING
Storage space of about 53 mmt including 4 mmt in
CAP (covered and plinth) AND in horizontal warehouses in highly
inhospitable conditions combined with consistent fumigation makes the grain vulnerable
to damage and deterioration. Vertical steel silos/elevators with environment
control are about only one mmt.
Uncongenial storage is the major challenge required to appropriately operationalize this bill. Response from the Food Ministry is that states are
required to create matching adequate infrastructure!!! States require funds and
tendering procedures compliance for such constructions and to avoid rampant
corruption charges. So the game of
shifting onus continues.
ABSENCE OF FOCUSED ACCOUNTABILITY
CAG observes that under the
existing policy, the
total tonnage of
food grains stocked
by FCI/ State Governments/their agencies and
paddy/rice held by private millers
constitutes the Central
Pool. In practice,
the indicated stock
in Central Pool
may not be factually
available for distribution at a given point of time due to involvement of
multiple agencies. CAG therefore points to strong possibilities of
mismanagement, theft, pilferages, damage/destruction to the cereals and recommends
“single point accountability” of FCI—which is imaginatively impossible
under FSB/FSO due to each state having its own agenda of decentralised/non
decentralised procurement and distribution.
The message of CAG to the Government and visionaries of FSB/FSO is “Doctor heal
thyself”. Some of the flaws, even if attempted to be remedied after
promulgation of the FSO, cannot be eliminated because “States” are not necessarily willing to
comply with Central directives because of coalition politics of diverse
political spectrum.
No comments:
Post a Comment