Forum Views ()
Forum Replies ()
Read more with google mobile :
Special Report: India's food chain in deep change
|
Edition:
U.S.
Article
Comments (0)
Slideshow
Full Focus
Photos of the week
Our top photos from the past week. Full Article
Follow Reuters
Facebook
Twitter
RSS
YouTube
Read
Quick Guide to the Greek crisis
7:54am EDT
Boeing expects customers to look at Airbus neo
9:41am EDT
Hypersonic: Paris-Tokyo in two and a half hours
5:16am EDT
Big order helps Airbus glide over glitches
|
11:29am EDT
Europe gives Greece ultimatum: austerity for loans
|
10:47am EDT
Discussed
73
Republicans to debate, with Romney the frontrunner
48
Weiner tells friends he will resign: NY Times
45
IMF cuts U.S. growth forecast, warns of crisis
Watched
Paris air show takes off
Sat, Jun 18 2011
Airbus' view of flying in the future
Mon, Jun 13 2011
Hefner's revenge; Ryan Reynolds stops traffic
Fri, Jun 17 2011
Special Report: India's food chain in deep change
Tweet
Share this
Email
Print
Related News
South Asia's growing modernity masks women's plight
Tue, Jun 14 2011
Consumers spend less, recovery seen on horizon
Tue, Jun 14 2011
In India's grain bowl, farms face threat from job program
Tue, Jun 14 2011
Germany pins down E.coli: "It's the bean sprouts"
Fri, Jun 10 2011
Special report: Scientists race to avoid climate change harvest
Fri, Jun 10 2011
Analysis & Opinion
No domestic cues; look for Fed meeting
Could Delhi University’s perfect 100% demand drive students abroad?
Related Topics
World »
1 / 2
A trolley laden with fresh and processed food sits parked in an aisle as customers shop at a supermarket in Mumbai May 30, 2011. Indians are increasingly heading to shiny, air-conditioned supermarkets where the aisles are packed with choice instead of the tiny stores where customers have to ask for items off dusty shelves offering just one or two brands of essential groceries. Picture taken May 30, 2011.
Credit: Reuters/Vivek Prakash
By Jo Winterbottom and Rajendra Jadhav
SHIVTHAR, India |
Mon Jun 20, 2011 10:40am EDT
SHIVTHAR, India (Reuters) - Ajit Govind Sable's family have owned their farm in India's western Maharashtra state for 10 generations, which even for a region that has been farming for more than 10,000 years is long enough to witness plenty of changes.
Two generations back, they started cultivating sugar cane here in Shivthar, a village in Maharashtra's highlands near the Krishna river. India's most industrialized state soon became its largest sugar producer.
Today, it's not sugar the 35-year-old Sable is talking about as he sips sweet tea in the front yard of the low, two-storey farmhouse where half the ground floor houses his turmeric crop.
He's discussing peppers, which he is now growing under polythene plastic coverings. Like an increasing number of farmers in India, Sable is exploiting a shift in taste toward fruits and vegetables among Indians.
"My colleagues grow flowers under poly," Sable says. "But the investment for that is too much for me, so I'm trying out peppers. You can't eat flowers if you can't find buyers for them," he notes.
While many Indian farmers are eager to adjust to changing diets in one of the world's fastest growing markets, the government continues to subsidize the cultivation of wheat, sugar and rice crops to ensure basic food needs for the country's half a billion poor.
The result is overflowing stocks of these carbohydrate-heavy staples and a huge subsidy bill that is adding to a ballooning budget deficit.
India, many agricultural experts say, is spending billions to prop up a traditional farm sector at the expense of investment in new crops and agricultural innovation.
But in a country where one out of five Indians goes hungry, the government has had to focus on foods that fuel or fill -- carbohydrate-heavy wheat, rice and sugar. About 36 percent of women and 34 percent of men in India are underweight. The costs of that undernourishment is high in terms of healthcare, lost productivity and poor quality of life.
At the same time, a growing urban middle class is consuming more higher-value, high protein foods, which is stoking food price inflation -- as well as changing business and farm models in rural India.
The food chain in India is undergoing deep change.
"There is a view that this is a structural shift and pulses, milk, meat, eggs, fish, protein items -- these are sectors where you need to concentrate," Abhijit Sen, who sits on the government's planning committee, said in a speech on June 5.
RISING MIDDLE CLASS
Those shifts have been under way for years but are accelerating with rapid urbanization and the expansion of India's middle class. Take Avantika Singh, for example. A consultant in the hotel industry, she lives in an apartment block in Delhi with her husband Sanjay, a television producer, and their 7-year-old daughter, Romsha.
The Singhs are still fond of traditional Indian food such as idlis, southern style rice pancakes served with spicy sauce, and parathas, wheat flatbreads cooked with oil or ghee.
But on this day Avantika, 41, is cooking pasta with fresh peppers.
"As a working person, I look at whatever is easy to do and nothing too elaborate," she says. "When you make idlis it's a whole day, day-and-a-half procedure. I don't have that kind of time."
She sees her parents' generation suffering the effects of the sugar-heavy, oily diet they grew up on.
"Even if we make parathas, we don't put butter and ghee in," Avantika says.
India is getting wealthier as well as healthier.
Its 8 percent annual growth, second only to China among major countries, is boosting incomes rapidly in the trillion dollar economy. Per capita income surged to $1,265 in 2010 from $857 in 2006 -- a nearly 50 percent increase -- according to the World Bank and IMF.
Middle class households are expected to grow 67 percent in the next five years, bringing over 53 million households into an annual income bracket between 340,000 and 1.7 million rupees ($7,600-38,000).
Bijay Kumar, managing director of the National Horticulture Board, says having more money than your parents is pushing up demand for high-protein foods.
"Rising income levels are allowing people to spend on high value stuff," he says. "People are more aware of health. They are increasing their intake of fruits in their regular diet."
In 2009-10, Indians boosted spending on fruit and vegetables by nearly 9 percent over the year earlier. They shelled out almost 31 percent more on meat, eggs and fish. Spending on cereals, on the other hand, was flat.
"A dietary transformation is underway in the country and demand for high value, vitamin and protein rich food such as fruit, vegetables, milk, eggs, poultry, meat and fish is increasing," the International Food Policy Research Institute (IFPRI) said in a study this year.
FOOD SECURITY
Years of eating an oil-rich, sugary diet high in carbohydrates have left many Indians with a paunch and a health problem. India has the world's largest diabetes population at just below 51 million people, while heart disease is the single-largest cause of death.
Yet hunger is endemic among the country's 500 million poor.
The government of Prime Minister Manmohan Singh is drafting a Food Security Act that promises to expand subsidized wheat and rice well beyond the current 30 percent of the population in a country that is home to 40 percent of the world's malnourished children.
That could mean India spending about $25 billion a year on providing cheap food or about 9 percent of total spending this year -- more than four times the expenditure on healthcare.
While the farm sector is slowly diversifying, it is a declining contributor to growth, despite providing a living to more than half the country's workforce.
About 600 million Indians are dependent on farming -- half the population of 1.2 billion -- even though agriculture makes up only 14.6 percent of the economy and has been declining from 30 percent a decade ago.
A severe drought meant no growth for the sector in 2009-10 and last year it missed its 4 percent target for expansion, Indian officials said, even as the overall economy powered ahead with 8.5 percent growth.
The average size of farms in India is a mere 1.33 hectares -- about the size of two soccer pitches -- and that figure has been steadily declining.
Farmers are finding it ever more difficult to make ends meet. The introduction of high-yielding seed varieties and increased use of fertilizers and irrigation spawned the Green Revolution in the 1960s that allowed India to become self-sufficient in grains. But experts say agriculture innovation and efficiency has stalled in recent years and farmers are getting squeezed by rising costs and inefficient agronomy.
Since the mid-1990s, an estimated 150,000 small farmers have committed suicide, according to the Center for Human Rights and Global Justice at New York University, most of them over debts.
Increasingly, voices in government and among experts are calling for a different approach, one that curbs subsidy spending, tackles inflation and boosts agricultural production of higher-value foods.
CUT SAFETY NETS
Ashok Gulati is a recent recruit to the government's inner circle from the world of research. His white hair and beard marked him out at conferences when he worked for IFPRI in New Delhi.
Now as chairman of the government's commission on farm prices and costs he has moved, as he puts it, from talking a lot with hardly anyone listening to being heard every time he speaks.
Gulati says too much money is going into safety nets such as subsidies and minimum wages when the government should be investing more to boost agricultural growth and innovation.
India's agriculture ministry plans to invest about $4.8 billion in 2011-12.
"I would say you should have 70 percent of resources for growth and 30 percent for welfare objectives, but it's the other way around," Gulati says.
The World Bank has criticized the subsidies as highly inefficient. But they have powerful political supporters, especially Sonia Gandhi, president of the ruling Congress Party, whose vote bank has long been in rural areas.
Gulati also favors modernizing distribution networks. Supply chains should be shortened, by making it easier for retailers and food processors to buy direct from farmers.
Although many states now allow retailers to do this outside the regulated local markets known as mandi, in practice poor infrastructure makes that difficult.
COLD STORAGE
Ganpat Chowdhary, 45, is a trader at a mandi in Pune. Surrounded by piles of rose and pale green mangoes sweating in the fierce summer sun, he has his own problems -- the perishable nature of his products.
About 30 percent of fruit and vegetable production goes to waste in India. Summer temperatures which regularly top 40 degrees Celsius (104 F) also mean fruit stored without chilling can ripen overnight.
Temperature-controlled warehouses are sprouting up across India but are mostly small-scale private enterprises.
"We are also keen to set up a cold storage facility," Chowdhary says. "It's essential, as damage levels are very high in fruits."
The National Horticulture Board's Kumar says wastage can be trimmed by increasing the amount of cold storage facilities available.
"We need good infrastructure to collect and aggregate farm goods produced in remote areas," he said. "They need to be delivered to consumers as early as possible.
Chowdhary, who's been in the fruit business for the past two decades, has a different idea.
"In the last four to five years, sales of fruit have risen by 25-30 percent. The next stage for us is to go back to the farm and process fruits."
That way he could sell direct to the supermarkets.
SUPERMARKET SUPPLY CHAINS
Devendra Chawla is showing off his display of chutney jars at a branch of a Big Bazaar supermarket in an expensive South Delhi neighborhood .
Indians are increasingly heading to air-conditioned stores like this, where aisles are packed with choice instead of the tiny mom-n-pop stores where items are lifted off dusty shelves offering just one or two brands of essential groceries.
Chawla says Big Bazaar's size and presence across India allows them to buy from both big distributors and local suppliers.
He sees huge potential for those who get it right. "If the country is growing by 8 to 9 percent, incomes will increase and I think food as a category will get developed," he says.
"The market is so huge that it can absorb many more (retail) brands," says the clean-shaven Chawla, sporting the intercontinental look of open-necked check shirt and chinos .
"The supply chain and cold storage are also getting developed, so I think for the country and for our company, food is a big bet. It's huge."
But the government needs to invest much more in distribution infrastructure, he said.
"If we can develop good infrastructure and then supply chains and cold storage, I think that can make a lot of difference to the country."
India's supply chains are fragmented and often involve several layers of middlemen between tractor and table.
Its road system is clogged and underdeveloped, while railway freight turnaround times are slow with limited availability of refrigerated freight vans. Cold storage of about 24 million tonnes is woefully inadequate for the world's second-biggest producer of fruit and vegetables. All of this means availability of fresh produce is highly regionalized.
It's not unusual to see wooden flatbed carts loaded with vegetables and fruits right on the doorstep even in big cities -- very convenient for shoppers but it does increase the mileage and moves for produce and raising the chance of damage.
Back in Shivthar (Shiva's ground), transportation is also on Sable's mind as his daughter takes the evening's milk from their cow in a metal churn up to the end of the road for collection.
He says he'd like to sell to retail food chains because they offer higher prices, but it's hard to deal with them directly.
"It's a headache to arrange transport according to their needs. I prefer to sell to wholesalers. They buy from the farm gate, so I don't need to worry about the transportation delay and wastage," he says.
($1 = 44.746 Indian Rupees)
(Additional reporting by Mayank Bhardwaj, Ratnajyoti Dutta, Rajesh Kumar Singh, Abhijit Neogy and Krittivas Mukherjee in NEW DELHI; Editing by Bill Tarrant)
World
Tweet this
Link this
Share this
Digg this
Email
Reprints
We welcome comments that advance the story through relevant opinion, anecdotes, links and data. If you see a comment that you believe is irrelevant or inappropriate, you can flag it to our editors by using the report abuse links. Views expressed in the comments do not represent those of Reuters. For more information on our comment policy, see http://blogs.reuters.com/fulldisclosure/2010/09/27/toward-a-more-thoughtful-conversation-on-stories/
Comments (0)
Be the first to comment on reuters.com.
Add yours using the box above.
Social Stream (What's this?)
© Copyright 2011 Thomson Reuters
Editorial Editions:
Africa
Arabic
Argentina
Brazil
Canada
China
France
Germany
India
Italy
Japan
Latin America
Mexico
Russia
Spain
United Kingdom
United States
Reuters
Contact Us
Advertise With Us
Help
Journalism Handbook
Archive
Site Index
Video Index
Reader Feedback
Mobile
Newsletters
RSS
Podcasts
Widgets
Your View
Analyst Research
Thomson Reuters
Copyright
Disclaimer
Privacy
Professional Products
Professional Products Support
Financial Products
About Thomson Reuters
Careers
Online Products
Acquisitions Monthly
Buyouts
Venture Capital Journal
International Financing Review
Project Finance International
PEhub.com
PE Week
FindLaw
Super Lawyers Attorney Rating Service
Reuters on Facebook
Thomson Reuters is the world's largest international multimedia news agency, providing investing news, world news, business news, technology news, headline news, small business news, news alerts, personal finance, stock market, and mutual funds information available on Reuters.com, video, mobile, and interactive television platforms. Thomson Reuters journalists are subject to an Editorial Handbook which requires fair presentation and disclosure of relevant interests.
NYSE and AMEX quotes delayed by at least 20 minutes. Nasdaq delayed by at least 15 minutes. For a complete list of exchanges and delays, please click here.
Other News on Monday, 20 June 2011 Syrian forces prevent refugees fleeing to Turkey
|
Family of 3, friend killed in small plane crash
U.S., Afghanistan confirm peace talks with Taliban
Israel asks U.S. to let spy out of jail for funeral
|
South Korean marines shoot at passenger plane
Iraq hunting $17 billion missing after U.S. invasion
|
Ailing BoSox: Crawford goes on DL with hamstring strain; Buchholz shut down
Mexico into Gold Cup semis vs. Honduras; U.S. plays Jamaica in quarters
Marlins manager Edwin Rodriguez resigns as team sputters
Tiki Barber reveals bout with depression after retirement; excited about comeback
Yemenis look to tribes as force for change
In Arab Spring chill, UAE puts bloggers on trial
Hamas leader urges Fatah to abandon West
Green Lantern falls short at box office
|
Amy Winehouse cancels shows after Belgrade blunder
|
NATO admits Libya air strike led to civilian deaths
|
Japan PM may set conditions for resignation on Monday: report
|
Kevin VanDam wins record Angler of Year Award
Assad to address Syria as his troops block refugees
|
Chappel, Garrigus lead Americans at Rory's U.S. Open
Stats interesting! Flames add research whiz to coaching staff
Miguel Cairo homer prevents Reds from being swept by Jays
Pennington moves to booth for 2011 season
Thousands protest in Morocco for more reform
|
Analysis: Thai army takes sides as divisive election nears
|
Albert Pujols hurts wrist in Cards win over Royals
Colombia car bomb wounds 17, calamity averted
|
Music promoter kidnapped, robbed over Shaqs sex tapes
Rory's Rampage: McIlroy shoots 16-under, mauls field, crushes Congressional at 111th U.S. Open
Tribe fires hitting coach Nunnally
Refugees on rise and poor countries bear brunt: UNHCR
|
Virginia rallies late to hold off California at the CWS
Not only .coms as Internet body throws open domain
|
Sega Sammy shares fall after cyber attack
|
Panasonic forecasts 11 percent drop in full-year profit
|
Softbank CEO sees Alipay agreement with Alibaba soon
|
Miss California, a history buff, named Miss USA
|
Marilyn Monroe subway dress sells for $4.6 million
|
Amy Winehouse cancels shows after Belgrade blunder
|
Bold and Beautiful top drama at Daytime Emmy awards
|
Noah Wyle chooses sci-fi series for TV comeback
|
Springsteen saxophonist Clarence Clemons dies
|
Tunisia's Ben Ali says he was tricked into leaving
|
Egypt's ex-president Mubarak has cancer: lawyer
|
U.S. urges swift implementation of Sudan Abyei deal
|
Pakistan militants force girl to wear suicide vest
|
Egypt army web page tests presidential hopefuls
|
Special Report: India's food chain in deep change
|
Senegalese rappers shaking up youth ahead of polls
|
Michael Bay says Megan Fox fired from 'Transformers' for 'Hitler' comments
NFL owners appear set on implementing rookie wage scale
Trader Back: Jack McKeon returning to manage Marlins
Somali power struggle could intensify as premier quits
Militias and the displaced
Lebanons opposition feeling threatened
'Jackass' star Ryan Dunn dies in car crash
Same-sex marriage vote expected in New York Senate
Al-Assad admits opposition has legitimate grievances
Gas deal with U.S. energy firm sparks protest in Bangladesh
Sega says 1.3 million users affected by cyber attack
|
Google signs up British Library to books project
|
China's Huawei storms into tablet PC sector
|
Demand for video driving mobile data traffic: report
|
Greece at new risk of being pushed off euro
Bodies of missing Tenn. mom, Jo Ann Bain, and daughter found
Female Breasts Are Bigger Than Ever
AMD Trinity Accelerated Processing Units Now in Volume Production
The Avengers (2012 film), made the second biggest opening- and single-day gross of all-time
AMD to Start Production of piledriver
Ivy Bridge Quad-Core, Four-Thread Desktop CPUs
Islamists Protest Lady Gaga's Concert in Indonesia
Japan Successfully Broadcasts an 8K Signal Over the Air
ECB boosts loans to 1 trillion Euro to stop credit crunch
Egypt : Mohammed Morsi won with 52 percent
What do you call 100,000 Frenchmen with their hands up
AMD Launches AMD Embedded R-Series APU Platform
Fed Should not Ignore Emerging Market Crisis
Fed casts shadow over India, emerging markets
Why are Chinese tourists so rude? A few insights