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Panel report on sugar decontrol in 6 months: Rangarajan

Panel report on sugar decontrol in 6 months: Rangarajan

In January, Prime Minister Manmohan Singh had formed an expert committee, under the chairmanship of C Rangarajan, to examine issues related to decontrolling of the sugar sector.

An expert committee on sugar decontrol is likely to submit its report in the next six months, Prime Minister's economic advisory panel Chairman C Rangarajan said on Monday.

In January, Prime Minister Manmohan Singh had formed an expert committee, under the chairmanship of C Rangarajan, to examine issues related to decontrolling of the sugar sector.

"I think we are meeting after one month again. In the next six months, we hope to submit the report. This is a preliminary meeting, we discussed various issues facing sugar sector," Rangarajan told reporters after the meeting.

On the deliberation in the meeting, Kaushik Basu, Chief Economic Advisor, Ministry of Finance, said: "We are serious about this (sugar decontrol). Many countries like Brazil have really flourished and we want this to happen in India".

Apart from Rangarajan and Kaushik Basu, the members of the committee include secretaries to the Department of Food and Agriculture, Agricultural Costs and Prices (CACP) Chairman Ashok Gulati, former Agriculture Secretary Nand Kumar and K P Krishnan, Secretary EAC.


"Shared feeling is that potential of this sector has not been realised in India. We will write serious report. I am keeping my fingers crossed, things will happen," Basu noted.

The sugar industry is under government control, right from the level of production to distribution.

The apex sugar industry bodies ISMA and NFCSF are seeking partial decontrol of the sector, including freedom to sell sugar in the open market and doing away with the levy obligation for Public Distribution System (PDS).

Under the levy obligation, sugar mills are required to sell 10 per cent of their output to the government at below-cost rates for supply to ration shops. Mills supply levy sugar at 60 per cent of the cost of production, resulting in an annual industry loss of about Rs 2,500-3,000 crore.

Industry has also been demanding removal of the monthly release system under which food ministry allocates quantity of sugar to be sold in the open market every month.

Sugar production in India, the world's second largest producer but the largest consumer, is estimated to touch 26 million tonnes against the annual demand of 22 million tonnes.

Published on: Feb 27, 2012, 2:21 PM IST
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