India's
wheat production is likely to cross the Government's earlier target
of 72.5 million tons this year owing to better weather conditions.
A bumper crop usually leads to lower imports or no imports. Yet
the Agriculture Minister Sharad Pawar has given strong indications
that the government will be proactive on imports this year, after
scrambling for costly purchases last year as output and stocks
fell. India will import up to 3 million tonnes of wheat if necessary
this year and has allowed duty-free trade until the end of 2007.
It is said that the firms might start scouting the market by
mid-May, when purchases by state agencies from farmers taper off
and output estimates become clear.
Lower wheat production last year had led to a 30 per cent rise
in global price of wheat on the Chicago Board of Trade. Wheat
prices rose to a decade-high in October 2006 partly because India
resumed imports in February 2006 after six years.
India's public sector and private traders imported 6.5 million
tonnes of wheat last year after production fell to 69.35 million
tons. In fact, in mid-March, the Government allowed pubic sector
State Trading Corporation (STC) and Food Corporation of India
(FCI) to import 3 million tons of wheat by the end of April to
boost domestic supply.
The buffer stocks are used to sell grain to the poor at subsidised
prices and meet the needs of welfare schemes. But stocks fell
last year as the government managed to buy only 9.2 million tonnes
from farmers against the targeted 13 million tonnes.
But a higher wheat production this year may help reign in inflation
that has stayed above the Reserve Bank of India's (RBI) comfort
level of 5-5.5 per cent since September 2006. Inflation accelerated
to 6.46 per cent in the week ended March 3. So far, the stress
has been on reducing inflation through relaxing import norms.
Also, the stress is on procurement of wheat from farmers. The
government will be a stiff contender to private traders in the
mandis. The agricultural ministry has raised the price paid to
farmers by Rs 1,000 per tonne to Rs 8,500 per tonne for the wheat
needed to rebuild its buffer stocks. Through its procuring agencies
like the FCI, government is expected to buy 15 million tonnes
to raise stocks. It hopes to have stocks of 4-4.5 million tonnes
in April made up mainly of imported wheat.
In the second week of April India allowed wheat import from
Pakistan. It is reported that the traders have contracted around
35,000 tonnes of wheat from Pakistani suppliers. The total wheat
import contract from the neighbouring country could be about 46,000
tonnes.
Last year, Indian authorities suggested bartering their sugar
for Pakistani wheat, but the proposal did not go anywhere. Pakistan
did buy half its sugar imports from India that year, following
the removal of a four-year ban on Indian sugar after an improvement
in relations between the countries.
The wheat sale comes after Pakistan's government lifted a two-and-a-half-year
ban on all wheat exports in January, on expectations of a bumper
harvest of 23 million tonnes this year.
The government, now, will have to move cautiously as the wheat
prices will rise sharply if they don't ensure good volumes in
the market after procurement. The government would be able to
build stocks with purchases but will not be able to check prices
if the volume of wheat for sale is not available through proper
channels. Also in a buying spree from the domestic market, the
government has also perked up the price of wheat by paying the
farmers.
However, analysts fear over the rise in global price of wheat
is not allayed. India being the second-largest producer of wheat
is sending a signal to the world that all is not well with domestic
production of wheat. This might have a spiral effect on the prices
of wheat across the globe.
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