NEW DELHI - The Indian government has banned onion exports till March 2024 and lifted import duties on yellow peas as it tries to bring down food prices, a hot-button issue that could hurt the re-election campaign of Prime Minister Narendra Modi.
These moves follow its restrictions on the export of sugar and rice earlier in 2023.
Analysts said that the series of food export bans and exemptions rolled out by India, while having global reverberations, would continue until the general election, which is due by May 2024.
“Notably, inflation in key items within the food basket, such as pulses, cereals and spices, has persistently remained in double digits in recent months. The recent surge in prices of sugar and vegetables is a source of apprehension,” said Mr Sarbartho Mukherjee, senior economist at credit rating agency CareEdge.
He said that regulating prices of food items ahead of the general election remained a key “imperative”.
Inflation, led by high food prices, rose to a three-month high of 5.55 per cent in November.
The onion ban comes after the government in August slapped a 40 per cent export duty on onions to prevent prices spiking beyond 50 rupees (80 Singapore cents) a kilogram in the wholesale market.
ST Asian Insider: Malaysia Edition Get exclusive insights into Malaysia in weekly round-up
Thank you!
Sign up
By signing up, you agree to our Privacy Policy and T&Cs.
In December, the food staple – the sowing of which was disrupted by late and low rainfall in areas where onions are grown – saw prices touch 45 rupees a kilogram in the wholesale market, prompting the outright ban.
Onions, in particular, have been known to exact a punishing political toll.
In 1998, the Delhi state government run by the Bharatiya Janata Party was voted out because state elections coincided with a rise in onion prices.
The December 2023 onion ban, like earlier export restrictions on rice and sugar, also impacted countries outside of India, the second-largest producer of onions, with prices doubling in the immediate aftermath of the ban in Bangladesh, local media reported.
Other neighbouring countries like Nepal, Bhutan, Sri Lanka and the Maldives also saw rising prices.
Malaysia’s Agriculture and Food Security Minister Mohamad Sabu said the country would source onions from China and Pakistan to make up for India’s ban, while Nepal has said it will ask India to make an exemption and continue onion exports.
The Singapore Food Agency (SFA) said in an e-mail response on Dec 18 that there was no onion shortage in Singapore despite India’s ban. “There is adequate supply of onions to date,” said the SFA, noting that onions are imported from 20 countries and regions such as Malaysia, China, India and Australia.
The agency, however, noted that food disruptions would continue and urged consumers to be “flexible and adaptable in their food choices, such as by switching to alternative food types or varieties of vegetables in the event of a disruption”.
“Global supplies will continue to face uncertainties and food supply disruptions may occur from time to time. While the Government will do what we can to minimise the impact, we will not be able to completely mitigate disruptions to our food supply,” the SFA said.
Indonesians grow chillies on rooftops and balconies as domestic prices skyrocket due to drought
Rising food prices eat into Indian household budgets
In India, the yield for farm crops in 2023 has been impacted by the driest August since 1901, with delayed and uneven monsoon rains cutting production of commodities from rice to sugar and wheat.
As a result, India, the world’s largest exporter of rice, banned the export of broken and non-basmati white rice varieties in July, in a decision the United Nations Food and Agriculture Organisation said pushed up global rice prices to their highest levels in 15 years.
Indian rice production is estimated by the agriculture ministry to fall by 3.79 per cent to 106.31 million tonnes in 2023.
The government has also extended an earlier ban on sugar exports from October 2023 to September 2024. It will allow the export of only 6.1 million tonnes of sugar, which is almost half that of 2022, during this period.
Economists expect this food price volatility to continue in the coming months due to lower water reservoir levels and delayed sowing of crops like onions.
Mr Mukherjee noted that the volatility in food prices remained a primary challenge to the Reserve Bank of India’s efforts to curb headline inflation and maintain it close to the 4 per cent target.
Inflation hit 6 per cent in the second quarter of the financial year ending March 31, 2024.
Analysts underlined how the government needed to look beyond bans to other solutions to insulate the country from food production disruptions caused by the weather.
“A durable solution to this is better storage and food processing. In the absence of such provisions, a hit to production quickly translates into price spikes, and the government has often had to resort to export bans and imports to stem those,” said Mr Dharmakirti Joshi, chief economist at CRISIL, a global analytics company.
With elections around the corner, political considerations are seen to outweigh all other obligations as Mr Modi seeks not just a third term in power but also a majority government like his previous two terms.
Mr Modi, according to opinion polls, is comfortably placed as the leading contender in the 2024 general election.
As Indian export curbs fuel global food inflation, who are the winners and losers?
Burger King says tomatoes on ‘vacation’ as India battles food inflation
Professor Biswajit Dhar, a distinguished professor at the Council for Social Development, a research and advocacy institution, said that food inflation had not yet become a political issue, but added that the challenge would be at the beginning of 2024 when prices of vegetables usually spike ahead of the arrival of fresh stock.
“The government doesn’t want food price inflation to become a political issue,” he said.
“Exports can wait and India’s promise to feed the world can wait. First is political expediency.”
Your browser does not support iframes, but you can use the following link: <a href="https://omny.fm/shows/asian-insider-1/playlists/podcast/embed?style=cover" title="">Link</a><script>iFrameResize({ log: false }, '#iframe-field_embed_iframe-1044505')</script>
Already a subscriber? Log in
Our festive deal is here! Unwrap the gift of knowledge with the ST One Digital Package
ST One Digital $9.90/month $4.95*/month 12-month contract
*Not eligible for the Klook lucky draw
Subscribe now
Unlock these benefits All subscriber-only content on ST app and straitstimes.com
Easy access any time via ST app on 1 mobile device
Stay up to date on important topics and follow your favourite writers with myST
Join ST's Telegram channel and get the latest breaking news delivered to you.
India SFA/Singapore Food Agency Inflation/Price level
Facebook WhatsApp X More Whatsapp Linkedin FB Messenger Telegram Twitter Reddit WeChat Pinterest Print Purchase Article Copy permalink https://str.sg/iYL6
Read this subscriber-only article for free!
Just sign up for a free account and log in to continue reading.
India’s Modi battles food inflation ahead of 2024 general election
Sign up
Already have an account? Log in.
All done! This article is now fully available for you
India’s Modi battles food inflation ahead of 2024 general election
Read now
Please verify your e-mail to read this subscriber-only article in full
India’s Modi battles food inflation ahead of 2024 general election
Resend verification e-mail
The gift link for this subscriber-only article has expired.
Get unlimited access to all stories at $0.99/month for the first 3 months.
Subscribe now
You have reached your limit of subscriber-only articles this month.
Get unlimited access to all stories at $0.99/month for the first 3 months.
Subscribe now
Read and win!
Read 3 articles and stand to win rewards
Let's go! Terms & conditions apply
Frequently asked questions
Good job, you've read 3 articles today!
Spin the wheel now
Let's go! Terms & conditions apply
Frequently asked questions