India’s self-sufficiency policies for pulses and their implications for Myanmar

Globally, India is the largest producer and consumer of pulses, but increasing demand due to population growth has made the country reliant on imports, including from Myanmar. In turn, Myanmar is highly dependent on exports to India. A proposed advance purchase agreement between India and Myanmar in...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Roy, Devesh, Ajmani, Manmeet Singh, Boss, Ruchira, Pradhan, Mamata, Laitha, Andrew
Formato: Brief
Lenguaje:Inglés
Publicado: International Food Policy Research Institute 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/140877
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author Roy, Devesh
Ajmani, Manmeet Singh
Boss, Ruchira
Pradhan, Mamata
Laitha, Andrew
author_browse Ajmani, Manmeet Singh
Boss, Ruchira
Laitha, Andrew
Pradhan, Mamata
Roy, Devesh
author_facet Roy, Devesh
Ajmani, Manmeet Singh
Boss, Ruchira
Pradhan, Mamata
Laitha, Andrew
author_sort Roy, Devesh
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description Globally, India is the largest producer and consumer of pulses, but increasing demand due to population growth has made the country reliant on imports, including from Myanmar. In turn, Myanmar is highly dependent on exports to India. A proposed advance purchase agreement between India and Myanmar in 2016 failed, but revisiting the original proposed purchase agreement could be in the best interest of both countries, as Myanmar could secure a large market for pulses at stable prices and India could ensure its supply of pulses.
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publishDate 2022
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publisherStr International Food Policy Research Institute
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spelling CGSpace1408772025-11-06T04:39:07Z India’s self-sufficiency policies for pulses and their implications for Myanmar Roy, Devesh Ajmani, Manmeet Singh Boss, Ruchira Pradhan, Mamata Laitha, Andrew exports policies grain legumes lentils nutrition trade chickpeas trade agreements wheat food prices pigeon peas tariffs Globally, India is the largest producer and consumer of pulses, but increasing demand due to population growth has made the country reliant on imports, including from Myanmar. In turn, Myanmar is highly dependent on exports to India. A proposed advance purchase agreement between India and Myanmar in 2016 failed, but revisiting the original proposed purchase agreement could be in the best interest of both countries, as Myanmar could secure a large market for pulses at stable prices and India could ensure its supply of pulses. 2022-03-30 2024-04-12T13:36:48Z 2024-04-12T13:36:48Z Brief https://hdl.handle.net/10568/140877 en Open Access application/pdf International Food Policy Research Institute Roy, Devesh; Ajmani, Manmeet; Boss, Ruchira; Pradhan, Mamata; and Laitha, Andrew. 2022. India’s self-sufficiency policies for pulses and their implications for Myanmar. IFPRI Policy Brief March 2022. Washington, DC: International Food Policy Research Institute (IFPRI). https://doi.org/10.2499/9780896294240.
spellingShingle exports
policies
grain legumes
lentils
nutrition
trade
chickpeas
trade agreements
wheat
food prices
pigeon peas
tariffs
Roy, Devesh
Ajmani, Manmeet Singh
Boss, Ruchira
Pradhan, Mamata
Laitha, Andrew
India’s self-sufficiency policies for pulses and their implications for Myanmar
title India’s self-sufficiency policies for pulses and their implications for Myanmar
title_full India’s self-sufficiency policies for pulses and their implications for Myanmar
title_fullStr India’s self-sufficiency policies for pulses and their implications for Myanmar
title_full_unstemmed India’s self-sufficiency policies for pulses and their implications for Myanmar
title_short India’s self-sufficiency policies for pulses and their implications for Myanmar
title_sort india s self sufficiency policies for pulses and their implications for myanmar
topic exports
policies
grain legumes
lentils
nutrition
trade
chickpeas
trade agreements
wheat
food prices
pigeon peas
tariffs
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/140877
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