Making pulses affordable again: Policy options from the farm to retail in India

Pulses are an important source of complex carbohydrates and the main source of noncereal protein for most Indian families. The frequency of pulse consumption is higher than of any other source of protein among Indian consumers. Around 89 percent of consumers in India have pulses at least once a week...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Kishore, Avinash, Joshi, Pramod Kumar, Roy, Devesh
Formato: Brief
Lenguaje:Inglés
Publicado: Tata Cornell Institute 2017
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/147980
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author Kishore, Avinash
Joshi, Pramod Kumar
Roy, Devesh
author_browse Joshi, Pramod Kumar
Kishore, Avinash
Roy, Devesh
author_facet Kishore, Avinash
Joshi, Pramod Kumar
Roy, Devesh
author_sort Kishore, Avinash
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description Pulses are an important source of complex carbohydrates and the main source of noncereal protein for most Indian families. The frequency of pulse consumption is higher than of any other source of protein among Indian consumers. Around 89 percent of consumers in India have pulses at least once a week, while the corresponding number for consumption of fish, chicken, or meat is only 35.4 percent (IIPS and Macro International 2007). Pulses are also the cheapest source of non-cereal protein in India. Persistently high prices in the last few years have led to a significant decline in pulse consumption, from what was an already low level (Kumar and Joshi 2016). Rapidly rising prices of pulses have also contributed disproportionately to increases in relative prices of food (Sekhar and Bhatt 2016a). An average Indian household spends only 6–7 percent of its total food budget on pulses and pulse products, but pulses have accounted for more than 40 percent of the inflation in food prices in 2014–16 (Sekhar and Bhatt 2016a; Sekhar and Bhatt 2016b). Thus, high and rising pulse prices raise concerns for both nutrition and food price inflation. We need special policy efforts to increase the production and availability of pulses in India and make them more affordable to consumers. The central government has set the target to increase the annual production of pulses to over 24 million tonnes by 2020–21. This policy brief outlines policy strategies that can help achieve this goal, and it also points out the limitations of some of the most common recommendations for making pulses affordable in India (Kishore, Joshi, and Roy 2016).
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spelling CGSpace1479802025-02-24T06:49:21Z Making pulses affordable again: Policy options from the farm to retail in India Kishore, Avinash Joshi, Pramod Kumar Roy, Devesh imports food production grain legumes agricultural policies trade food supply food consumption domestic production food prices diet prices Pulses are an important source of complex carbohydrates and the main source of noncereal protein for most Indian families. The frequency of pulse consumption is higher than of any other source of protein among Indian consumers. Around 89 percent of consumers in India have pulses at least once a week, while the corresponding number for consumption of fish, chicken, or meat is only 35.4 percent (IIPS and Macro International 2007). Pulses are also the cheapest source of non-cereal protein in India. Persistently high prices in the last few years have led to a significant decline in pulse consumption, from what was an already low level (Kumar and Joshi 2016). Rapidly rising prices of pulses have also contributed disproportionately to increases in relative prices of food (Sekhar and Bhatt 2016a). An average Indian household spends only 6–7 percent of its total food budget on pulses and pulse products, but pulses have accounted for more than 40 percent of the inflation in food prices in 2014–16 (Sekhar and Bhatt 2016a; Sekhar and Bhatt 2016b). Thus, high and rising pulse prices raise concerns for both nutrition and food price inflation. We need special policy efforts to increase the production and availability of pulses in India and make them more affordable to consumers. The central government has set the target to increase the annual production of pulses to over 24 million tonnes by 2020–21. This policy brief outlines policy strategies that can help achieve this goal, and it also points out the limitations of some of the most common recommendations for making pulses affordable in India (Kishore, Joshi, and Roy 2016). 2017 2024-06-21T09:23:36Z 2024-06-21T09:23:36Z Brief https://hdl.handle.net/10568/147980 en https://hdl.handle.net/10568/147703 https://hdl.handle.net/10568/147528 https://hdl.handle.net/10568/147408 https://hdl.handle.net/10568/150245 https://hdl.handle.net/10568/147981 Open Access Tata Cornell Institute Kishore, Avinash; Joshi, Pramod Kumar; and Roy, Devesh. 2017. Making pulses affordable again: Policy options from the farm to retail in India. TCI-Tarina Policy Brief 8. https://tarina.tci.cornell.edu/wp-content/uploads/2019/01/TCI-TARINA-Policy-Brief-No.8-VD.pdf
spellingShingle imports
food production
grain legumes
agricultural policies
trade
food supply
food consumption
domestic production
food prices
diet
prices
Kishore, Avinash
Joshi, Pramod Kumar
Roy, Devesh
Making pulses affordable again: Policy options from the farm to retail in India
title Making pulses affordable again: Policy options from the farm to retail in India
title_full Making pulses affordable again: Policy options from the farm to retail in India
title_fullStr Making pulses affordable again: Policy options from the farm to retail in India
title_full_unstemmed Making pulses affordable again: Policy options from the farm to retail in India
title_short Making pulses affordable again: Policy options from the farm to retail in India
title_sort making pulses affordable again policy options from the farm to retail in india
topic imports
food production
grain legumes
agricultural policies
trade
food supply
food consumption
domestic production
food prices
diet
prices
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/147980
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