Repurposing fertilizer subsidies in India: An economywide modelling analysis

Between 1980 and 2023-pushed by green revolution technology and fertilizer subsidy policy-fertilizer consumption in India increased from 31.95 kg/ha to 136.05 kg/ha {FAI 2024). The fiscal burden of fertilizer subsidies in India has surged dramatically, increasing from INR 505 crores in 1980/1981 to...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Devi, Asha, Praveen, K. V., Sharma, Kriti, Pal, Barun Deb, Singh, Alka, Barman, Subrata, Reddy, K. R., Hanji, Shreya, Rao, Ch. Srinivasa
Formato: Brief
Lenguaje:Inglés
Publicado: Indian Council of Agricultural Research 2025
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/174098
_version_ 1855533849999572992
author Devi, Asha
Praveen, K. V.
Sharma, Kriti
Pal, Barun Deb
Singh, Alka
Barman, Subrata
Reddy, K. R.
Hanji, Shreya
Rao, Ch. Srinivasa
author_browse Barman, Subrata
Devi, Asha
Hanji, Shreya
Pal, Barun Deb
Praveen, K. V.
Rao, Ch. Srinivasa
Reddy, K. R.
Sharma, Kriti
Singh, Alka
author_facet Devi, Asha
Praveen, K. V.
Sharma, Kriti
Pal, Barun Deb
Singh, Alka
Barman, Subrata
Reddy, K. R.
Hanji, Shreya
Rao, Ch. Srinivasa
author_sort Devi, Asha
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description Between 1980 and 2023-pushed by green revolution technology and fertilizer subsidy policy-fertilizer consumption in India increased from 31.95 kg/ha to 136.05 kg/ha {FAI 2024). The fiscal burden of fertilizer subsidies in India has surged dramatically, increasing from INR 505 crores in 1980/1981 to INR 2,25,220 crores in 2022/2023 ( ibid). As of 2022/2023, the budgetary allocation for fertilizer subsidy was 1.02 percent of India's gross value added (GVA). Fertilizer subsidies have led to greater price increases for phosphorus and potassium fertilizers than for urea, making urea the preferred choice among farmers. This consequent overreliance on urea has created significant imbalances in soil nutrient composition, and subsidized urea is also often diverted to other industries undermining its intended benefit for the agricultural sector.
format Brief
id CGSpace174098
institution CGIAR Consortium
language Inglés
publishDate 2025
publishDateRange 2025
publishDateSort 2025
publisher Indian Council of Agricultural Research
publisherStr Indian Council of Agricultural Research
record_format dspace
spelling CGSpace1740982025-04-23T12:07:01Z Repurposing fertilizer subsidies in India: An economywide modelling analysis Devi, Asha Praveen, K. V. Sharma, Kriti Pal, Barun Deb Singh, Alka Barman, Subrata Reddy, K. R. Hanji, Shreya Rao, Ch. Srinivasa economics fertilizers subsidies urea Between 1980 and 2023-pushed by green revolution technology and fertilizer subsidy policy-fertilizer consumption in India increased from 31.95 kg/ha to 136.05 kg/ha {FAI 2024). The fiscal burden of fertilizer subsidies in India has surged dramatically, increasing from INR 505 crores in 1980/1981 to INR 2,25,220 crores in 2022/2023 ( ibid). As of 2022/2023, the budgetary allocation for fertilizer subsidy was 1.02 percent of India's gross value added (GVA). Fertilizer subsidies have led to greater price increases for phosphorus and potassium fertilizers than for urea, making urea the preferred choice among farmers. This consequent overreliance on urea has created significant imbalances in soil nutrient composition, and subsidized urea is also often diverted to other industries undermining its intended benefit for the agricultural sector. 2025-03 2025-04-09T12:59:15Z 2025-04-09T12:59:15Z Brief https://hdl.handle.net/10568/174098 en https://hdl.handle.net/10568/174071 https://www.iari.res.in/files/Divisions/Economics/Policy_brief_rice_export_04042025.pdf Open Access Indian Council of Agricultural Research Devi, Asha; Praveen, K. V.; Sharma, Kriti; Pal, Barun Deb; Singh, Alka; Barman, Subrata; et al. 2025. Repurposing fertilizer subsidies in India: An economywide modelling analysis. ICAR-IARI Policy Brief. New Delhi, India: Indian Council of Agricultural Research. https://www.iari.res.in/files/Divisions/Economics/Policy_brief_fertilizer_subsidy_04042025.pdf
spellingShingle economics
fertilizers
subsidies
urea
Devi, Asha
Praveen, K. V.
Sharma, Kriti
Pal, Barun Deb
Singh, Alka
Barman, Subrata
Reddy, K. R.
Hanji, Shreya
Rao, Ch. Srinivasa
Repurposing fertilizer subsidies in India: An economywide modelling analysis
title Repurposing fertilizer subsidies in India: An economywide modelling analysis
title_full Repurposing fertilizer subsidies in India: An economywide modelling analysis
title_fullStr Repurposing fertilizer subsidies in India: An economywide modelling analysis
title_full_unstemmed Repurposing fertilizer subsidies in India: An economywide modelling analysis
title_short Repurposing fertilizer subsidies in India: An economywide modelling analysis
title_sort repurposing fertilizer subsidies in india an economywide modelling analysis
topic economics
fertilizers
subsidies
urea
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/174098
work_keys_str_mv AT deviasha repurposingfertilizersubsidiesinindiaaneconomywidemodellinganalysis
AT praveenkv repurposingfertilizersubsidiesinindiaaneconomywidemodellinganalysis
AT sharmakriti repurposingfertilizersubsidiesinindiaaneconomywidemodellinganalysis
AT palbarundeb repurposingfertilizersubsidiesinindiaaneconomywidemodellinganalysis
AT singhalka repurposingfertilizersubsidiesinindiaaneconomywidemodellinganalysis
AT barmansubrata repurposingfertilizersubsidiesinindiaaneconomywidemodellinganalysis
AT reddykr repurposingfertilizersubsidiesinindiaaneconomywidemodellinganalysis
AT hanjishreya repurposingfertilizersubsidiesinindiaaneconomywidemodellinganalysis
AT raochsrinivasa repurposingfertilizersubsidiesinindiaaneconomywidemodellinganalysis