Good harvest profits not aplenty for India's farmers
Cotton farmer Ravindra Krishna Patil in Maharashtra should be feeling flush after strong monsoon rains and a good crop, but high costs have cast a pall over his preparations for the festive season.
Instead of splashing out on gold jewellery, appliances or maybe even a car during the biggest shopping season of the year, 28-year-old Patil must count his rupees after costs of everything from fuel to labour soared while cotton prices have fallen by nearly half.
India will celebrate one of its most important holidays, the Diwali festival of lights, later this month.
Producers of other major summer-sown crops such as rice, sugarcane, soya bean and maize also have to contend with falling prices and rising costs, which may ultimately contribute to crimping the growth of Asia's third-largest economy.
"Like last year, I was planning to buy some gold for my family members during Diwali. But now it is not possible. Cotton prices have dropped and gold has rallied," Patil said.
"I have spent more money than last year. The cost of seeds, fertilisers rose. Labour wages jumped, but my profit fell," he said, adding that he spent about 400,000 rupees ($8,107) for cultivating 16 acres of cotton, compared to 290,000 rupees a year ago.
Rising rural incomes have been a key driver of India's broader economic growth as well as revenues for makers of consumer products, such as Hindustan Unilever and Godrej Consumer, and motorbikes including Hero MotoCorp Ltd and Bajaj Auto Ltd.
Usually, a good monsoon and strong crop yields raise rural spending. Weaker rural demand may exacerbate slowing growth, although it could also cool inflation, which remains near double digits despite 12 interest rate increases since March 2010.
About 600 million Indians make a living from farming, even though agriculture makes up only 14.6 percent of the economy, down from 30 percent a decade ago.
The sector is infamous for the large number of suicides committed by farmers, whose livelihood depends almost exclusively on the whims of the weather.
India, the world's second most populous country, aims to produce record food grains of 245 million tonnes in the current crop year to June, an increase of 1.4 percent thanks to good monsoon rains.
Record output, however, is pushing down prices, and government minimum support prices have not risen in line with higher input costs.
Soybean futures prices have dropped 19 percent from this year's peak, while corn and rubber have dropped 27 percent and 13 percent respectively, from year highs. Turmeric and cotton prices are at half their peak levels.
WAGE SPIRAL
Maharashtra produces the largest cotton crop after top producer Gujarat.
After months of delay, India in June raised the state-set price of diesel by 9 percent, lifting the cost of ploughing, tilling and other land preparation operations for farmers.
A jump in fertiliser prices in the world market and a government move to ease its subsidy burden forced fertiliser makers to pass rising production costs to farmers.
What has hurt profitability most, farmers said, is rising wages for labourers, driven by government efforts to ensure a minimum level of paid work for rural households under its National Rural Employment Guarantee Act (NREGA).
"Farm labourers' wages have gone up sharply. And even after paying higher wages there is no guarantee you will get workers," said George Valy, president of the Indian Rubber Dealers' Federation. "The biggest task for farmers is to find workers."
Daily wages for female farm workers in the Jalgaon area, where Patil farms cotton, have risen to 100 rupees this year from 75 rupees a year ago and for male farm workers to 200 rupees from 150 rupees. Overall, farm wages in the area have more than doubled over four years.
The NREGA's impact on labour markets and broader inflation prompted India's farm ministry to ask the rural development ministry to halt the scheme during the sowing season.
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