Farmers’ Protests in India

Why in News: Since September 12, thousands of onion farmers in Maharashtra have launched protests against falling onion prices.

Background

Maharashtra is India’s largest onion-producing state.

  • Onion is a politically sensitive crop given its impact on both farmers’ livelihoods and consumer inflation.

Causes of Farmers’ Distress

1. Price Crash: Market price ₹800–1,000/quintal vs. production cost ₹2,200–2,500/quintal.

2. Excess Supply: Bumper Rabi crop + deterioration of stored onions.

3. Export Decline: Exports halved from 25.25 lakh tonnes (2022-23) to 11.47 lakh tonnes (2024-25). Importers shifted to China, Pakistan due to India’s policy flip-flops.

4. Buffer Stock Release: NCCF & NAFED onions released under Price Stabilisation Fund, pushing prices further down.

5. Policy Mismatch: Andhra Pradesh procures at ₹1,200/quintal, while Maharashtra farmers lack such support.

Onion Price Stabilisation Policy – Intended vs. Actual Impact

  • Intended Goal: Maintain affordability for consumers, prevent hoarding, and manage volatility.
  • Current Impact: Worsens farmers’ situation during glut years by competing with their marketable surplus.

Demands and Suggested Reforms

  • Stable Export Policy: Avoid ad-hoc bans/curbs to maintain credibility with importers (Bangladesh, Sri Lanka).
  • Export Incentives: To safeguard India’s position as a leading exporter.
  • State Procurement Model: Emulate Andhra’s assured procurement.
  • Market Infrastructure: Invest in storage, processing, dehydration units to reduce wastage.
  • Balanced Policy: Ensure consumer affordability + producer viability.

Way Forward 

1. Stable Export Policy: Introduce a predictable medium-term export framework (with minimum assured quotas) to reduce credibility loss in global markets.

2. Farmer-Centric Procurement: Extend assured procurement (like Andhra Pradesh’s model) with minimum support-like interventions for onions in glut years.

3. Market Diversification: Promote value-added products (onion powder, flakes, dehydrated onions) to absorb surplus and boost exports.

4. Strengthened Storage Infrastructure: Invest in modern cold chains, pack houses, and scientific storage to reduce post-harvest losses (currently ~30–40%).

5. Price Risk Management: Introduce crop insurance and futures trading mechanisms to shield farmers from extreme volatility.

GS Paper III (Economy, Agriculture, Food Security):

  • Issues of agricultural marketing and price volatility.
  • Role of buffer stock policy and Price Stabilisation Fund in balancing farmer income security and consumer inflation.

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