Hard Winter Wheat Price Rise to $539 to Help India
The invasion of Ukraine by Russia is going to take a
heavy toll of India’s economy. Foreign Institutional Investors (FIIs) have
flooded out of emerging markets, stock and bond markets are down, and the trade
gap is getting exacerbated by high import prices (especially of oil). The
disruption of global shipping has worsened congestion that has long afflicted
container traffic and ports across the world. So, freight rates have
skyrocketed.
But every dark cloud has a silver lining. Ukraine and
Russia are among the world’s largest exporters of wheat. World trade in wheat
is usually around 200 million tonnes per year, with
the Black Sea accounting for a big chunk of that. Indeed, Black Sea prices for
some items have become more important for global trade than the traditional
bellwether prices in Chicago.
The war has sent global wheat prices soaring. This gives
India a golden chance to export record quantities of wheat. Several years ago,
India exported a few million tonnes per year. This
fell to zero when Indian wheat prices became higher than global prices in the
late 2010s.
But in the current year (2021-22), rising world prices
have made Indian wheat viable, so exports will shoot up to 7 million tonnes. In 2022-23, high world prices should enable India
to export as much as its ports can handle, which may be 15-20 million tonnes. If India can get an average price of $400 per tonne for 20 million tonnes, that
will mean a good $8 billion. It needs to hurry and book contracts quickly since
an early end to the war can send prices plummeting.
The world price of wheat was no more than $160 per tonne some years ago when supplies were ample. The Indian
minimum support price (MSP) for wheat was far higher, and so India could not
export wheat in those years. But now says Siraj
Hussain, former Union food secretary, in a recent column for The Wire
(bit.ly/35VCFLY), the US price of hard red winter wheat is already $539 per tonne, because the markets expect the war to punch a big
hole in global supplies. Exports of wheat from the Black Sea could fall by 30
million tonnes, while exports of maize, soybeans and
sunflower oil will also be hard hit. If India jumps into the fray with wheat
exports of 15-20 million tonnes, the global price
will come down a bit. Even so, the price could average $400 per tonne, a bonanza.
Rip as You Sow
The next sowing season in the Russian and Ukrainian
steppes is fast approaching. Right now, all agricultural activities – from
supplies of seeds, fertilisers and agricultural machinery to credit and
marketing – have been disrupted by the war. The sowing season may be lost
entirely in parts of the steppes, wiping out a full year’s production. That may
keep supplies short and prices high till late 2023.
Massive Indian wheat exports will not merely fetch a
forex bonanza. They will also facilitate a sharp reduction of the government’s
bloated food stocks. These have been rising for years since procurement has
exceeded offtake from the public distribution system (PDS), and exports of
wheat have been uneconomic for quite some time.
The interest and warehousing cost of food stocks, plus
losses to pests and moisture, means the economic cost of holding stocks can
rise by up to 10% every year. Sales from the PDS entail higher and higher
subsidies every year, since the sale price is fixed by law at ₹3 a kg for
rice and ₹2 kg for wheat, while procurement prices for both cereals rise
every year. Massive exports will help reduce bloated food stocks, which, in
turn, will reduce food subsidies and holding costs of stocks. This will be a
triple whammy.
India is a major rice exporter. But the global price of
rice has not changed much. India imports edible oils and maize, whose prices
have skyrocketed.
Stocks three times
buffer level
Buffer stocks peak at the end of a procurement season and
reach a trough at the start of the next procurement season. The April 1 norm
for buffer stocks of rice plus wheat is just 21 million tonnes,
while actual stocks are 82 million tonnes, four times
as high. For wheat alone, the buffer stock norm on April 1 is just 7.46 million
tonnes, against actual stocks of 23.4 million tonnes.
The World Trade Organisation
(WTO) agreed at its 2013 Bali meeting that developing countries could build
buffer stocks with subsidies, but not dump these later on export markets. This
means GoI could face technical hurdles in exporting
surplus grain from government stocks. However, thee subsidy effect will be more
than absorbed by the price rise.
Not Against the Grain
But the rise in global prices has pulled up prices in
Indian mandis too. Private exporters are buying wheat
in mandis for export. They could buy 15-20 million tonnes of wheat in the coming marketing season, leaving
relatively little for the government to procure at the MSP.
Private exporters will only buy high-quality wheat with a
low-moisture content. The government may end up buying mostly rain-damaged
wheat – farmers bribe food inspectors to accept this. This is a separate
problem crying out for reform.