ADVERTISEMENT

India Seeks to Boost Sugar Prices by Restricting Supply

Cabinet approves proposal to create a sugar stockpile of 3 million metric tons for one year.

India Seeks to Boost Sugar Prices by Restricting Supply
Sugar sits for sale in a market in New Delhi, India. (Photographer: Adam Ferguson/Bloomberg News)  

Watch this conversation with former Agriculture Secretary and Senior Fellow at ICRIER Siraj Hussain.

(Bloomberg) -- India, the world’s second-biggest sugar producer, is set to limit supplies in the local market to prevent a further fall in prices due to a record harvest.

The cabinet approved a proposal by the food ministry to create a sugar stockpile of 3 million metric tons for one year, Food Minister Ram Vilas Paswan told reporters in New Delhi on Wednesday. The government will spend 11.75 billion rupees ($176 million) on storage expenses, he said.

The government also plans to impose stock limits on sugar mills until Sept. 30 and implement a minimum benchmark selling price of 29 rupees a kilogram at factory gates, Paswan said. Sugar mills will be given 44.4 billion rupees in subsidized loans from banks for five years to expand ethanol manufacturing capacity, he said. The government will spend 13.32 billion rupees to partially pay the interest on debts, the minister said.

“The minimum price will improve factory gate prices from current levels,” said Abinash Verma, director general of Indian Sugar Mills Association. “However, the proposed rate is not enough to cover cost of production. It will, therefore, be a challenge to expect the sugar industry to clear the huge cane price arrears on this basis.”

Record Indian and Thai output has helped spur a 20 percent slump in benchmark global futures. Indian mills are defaulting on cane payments to farmers and currently owe about 220 billion rupees to growers after prices dropped below production costs, according to government data. Mills in Uttar Pradesh and Maharashtra, the nation’s top producers, are losing 7 to 8 rupees per kilogram on sugar sales, according to the Indian Sugar Mills Association.

“The buffer stockpile will reduce some surplus from the market and will improve market sentiments to support domestic prices,” Verma said.

To contact the reporters on this story: Pratik Parija in New Delhi at pparija@bloomberg.net;Abhijit Roy Chowdhury in New Delhi at achowdhury11@bloomberg.net

To contact the editors responsible for this story: Phoebe Sedgman at psedgman2@bloomberg.net;Unni Krishnan at ukrishnan2@bloomberg.net

©2018 Bloomberg L.P.