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Agri resources: PKRC urges govt to abandon corporate farming
Agri resources: PKRC urges govt to abandon corporate farming

Business Recorder

time11-06-2025

  • Business
  • Business Recorder

Agri resources: PKRC urges govt to abandon corporate farming

LAHORE: The Pakistan Kissan Rabita Committee (PKRC) termed the '2025 Economic Survey' a wake-up call and called upon the government to abandon corporate farming and military control over agricultural resources and redistribute public agricultural lands among landless farmers, especially women and youth in plots of up to 12.5 acres. PKRC General Secretary Farooq Tariq, while commenting on Economic Survey of Pakistan 2024-25, said according to the survey, the agriculture sector recorded a meagre growth rate of just 0.56–0.6 percent in the past year - the lowest in the last nine years. Without the moderate growth in livestock (4.72%), fisheries (1.42%), and forestry (3.3%), the dismal performance of major crops would have dragged the overall sector into even deeper decline. The most staggering drop occurred in major crops, whose collective production fell by 13.49 percent. Cotton suffered a massive 30.7 percent decline with its cultivated area shrinking by 15.7 percent. Cotton ginning was also declined by 19 percent, compounding the crisis. Wheat production declined by 8.9 percent, primarily because the government, despite earlier promises, refused to purchase wheat from farmers at PKR 3,900 per 40 kg, leaving growers in despair. Other critical crops like sugarcane, rice, and maize also registered declines ranging from one percent to 15 percent. In December 2024, Punjab Chief Minister Maryam Nawaz claimed that wheat had been cultivated on 16.5 million acres—achieving 82 percent of the province's target. However, ground realities have proven otherwise. All major farmer organizations had already criticized the government's failure to procure wheat at the promised support price and warned that growers were abandoning wheat cultivation. Instead of acknowledging its policy failures, the government blames climate change: erratic monsoons, delayed sowing, and extreme heat. But the reality is that the government's neoliberal agricultural policies have failed miserably. By exposing farmers to the whims of the free market and refusing to implement meaningful protections, these policies have caused a steep drop in production, Farooq Tariq added. He said for the first time, the survey admits that cultivated area has decreased - especially for cotton and wheat. This has had a direct impact on national food security. Agriculture contributes 23–24% to Pakistan's GDP and provides employment to 37 percent of the workforce. A crisis in this sector affects the entire economy. Suggesting ways to strengthen the agricultural sector, PKRC General Secretary also proposed a ban on new canals, particularly those impacting the Indus River system, legal implementation of Minimum Support Prices (MSP), starting with wheat at PKR 4,000 per 40kg and a ban on private wheat imports and strengthening PASSCO for public procurement. He also called for accountability for the wheat crisis, including arrest and investigation of hoarders and speculators, regulation of agricultural markets to prevent price volatility, rejecting IMF and WTO policies that undermine farmers; rebuilding public procurement systems and ensuring real access to interest-free loans for small farmers, while excluding agri-businesses and banks from subsidies. Copyright Business Recorder, 2025

Pakistan's wheat market at a crossroads: a call for rational liberalization
Pakistan's wheat market at a crossroads: a call for rational liberalization

Business Recorder

time06-06-2025

  • Business
  • Business Recorder

Pakistan's wheat market at a crossroads: a call for rational liberalization

Pakistan's wheat market is undergoing a critical transformation. During the 2023–24 procurement season, the government, along with the Pakistan Agricultural Storage and Services Corporation (PASSCO), stepped back from active procurement, opting for a market-led approach. However, this shift occurred without adequate preparation or confidence-building measures for the private sector. Private traders hesitated to procure wheat due to the government's carryover stock of 3-4 million tons—enough to unilaterally influence market prices. Although the state claimed to liberalize the market, it continued to exert control, particularly through price caps on wheat flour enforced by Deputy Commissioner (DC) offices. This duality—market liberalization on paper but intervention in practice—left private actors operating with thin margins and high risk. Farmers, without a guaranteed public buyer, faced severe financial distress as prices dropped below expectations. In the 2024–25 season, the government again refrained from direct procurement, but the policy landscape became even murkier. The state still controls flour prices via DC offices, distorting the wheat value chain. Farmers receive no price support, while millers and retailers operate under price ceilings that limit profitability and disincentivize investment. Previously, the government purchased 6–8 million tons of wheat annually—equivalent to Rs. 4 billion at current farm-gate prices (Rs 2300 per maund). Transferring this procurement responsibility to the private sector necessitates reasonable profit margins. However, with cap prices on flour set between Rs. 2800-2900 per maund, the private sector can only offer Rs. 2200–2300 per maund to farmers. The Rs. 700–800 spread is required to cover transportation, storage, spoilage, and returns on investment. The government may be trying to align domestic wheat prices with international rates (approximately Rs. 2350 per maund), but this overlooks essential logistical costs of import, and financing costs. Moreover, international prices are projected to rise before the next harvest. By that time, if the cap is lifted or enforcement weakens, private investors—rather than farmers—will reap the windfall A genuinely liberalized market would allow private traders to offer farmers higher prices today, anticipating future profits. This would create a win-win scenario, aligning incentives and narrowing the gap between local and international markets. However, current policy uncertainty suppresses this natural market function. Pakistan requires a balanced and rules-based liberalization strategy—one that protects producers, traders, and consumers alike. If the state fears monopolistic behaviour or hoarding, it should establish clear, pre-announced mechanisms for market intervention. A price-band model could offer a solution: If local prices exceed international prices by more than 20%, the government could allow imports to cool the market. If they fall more than 20% below global benchmarks, exports should be permitted to support farmers and traders. This 20% buffer reflects the cost of transportation, storage, losses, and expected returns on investment. While the percentage can be debated, it offers a rational starting point and introduces predictability. Clear pre-announced rules would provide all stakeholders—farmers, traders, and consumers—with a fair understanding of the market structure. Such rule-based frameworks would reduce the need for ad hoc interventions, avoid panic-driven decisions, and encourage long-term investment planning in agriculture. If the government completely refrains from interfering in the wheat market—including ceasing indirect controls via DC offices—private actors would be better positioned to offer fair prices to farmers. Expecting future international price increases, they would naturally share some of those anticipated gains at the time of procurement. This would increase farmer incomes and make the supply chain more efficient, with local prices aligning more closely with international benchmarks. Despite the promise of liberalization, one critical constraint remains: limited liquidity in the private sector. Large-scale procurement requires substantial capital—something many traders and millers lack. The government can facilitate this transition by offering subsidized credit lines to support private wheat procurement. This would ensure the private sector has the financial muscle to absorb the former role of public procurement agencies. In parallel, PASSCO's aging and inefficient storage infrastructure poses another challenge. Modern warehouses are essential to reducing post-harvest losses and preserving grain quality. Investments in such infrastructure could be spurred by a clear and stable policy environment, enabling private actors and public-private partnerships to participate effectively. The government is also attempting to operationalize an Electronic Warehouse Receipt (EWR) system. In theory, EWRs could transform the wheat market by allowing farmers to store their harvest, receive a digital receipt, and use it as collateral for loans or to sell on commodity exchanges. This could enhance price discovery, reduce distress selling, and improve access to finance. However, without a liberalized policy environment, the EWR system will struggle to gain traction. Price caps and unpredictable interventions undermine the trust required for such instruments to function. Farmers won't store wheat in accredited warehouses if future retail prices are caped, and banks won't lend against such receipts without confidence in price transparency and enforcement. Pakistan stands at a crossroads in wheat sector reform. The current hybrid model—government withdrawal from procurement coupled with ongoing market control—has paralyzed the system. Farmers lack protection, private traders lack incentive, and consumers remain vulnerable to price shocks. To build a functional and resilient wheat market, the government must commit to a consistent liberalization framework. Price interventions should be tied to clear, transparent benchmarks. Support systems such as subsidized credit and infrastructure upgrades must enable private actors to fulfill their new role in procurement and storage for at least next couple of years until their trust build on market forces. Only by removing ad hoc interventions and empowering market forces can Pakistan build a sustainable wheat economy—one where all stakeholders have a fair stake and where food security is driven by efficiency rather than distortion. Abedullah (The writer is an ex-Chief of Research at Pakistan Institute of Development Economics (PIDE), Islamabad, Pakistan)

How IMF has forced Pakistan to reform its farm sector
How IMF has forced Pakistan to reform its farm sector

Indian Express

time30-05-2025

  • Business
  • Indian Express

How IMF has forced Pakistan to reform its farm sector

Can one imagine India dismantling minimum support price (MSP)-based procurement operations in wheat and rice? Or the government dissolving the Food Corporation of India (FCI)? Both political and economic considerations – not risking farmer displeasure and ensuring adequate grain reserves for the public distribution system, as well as to curb excessive open market price volatility – practically rule these out. But Pakistan has done that and much more – under pressure from the International Monetary Fund (IMF). The Pakistan government did not declare any MSP for the 2024-25 wheat crop, sown in November-December and being marketed from April. Nor has Pakistan Agricultural Storage & Services Corporation Ltd – PASSCO, the country's equivalent of FCI – procured a single tonne this time. Last year, the MSP for the 2023-24 crop was fixed at Rs 3,900 per maund (40 kg), i.e. Rs 9,750/quintal, and PASSCO procured 1.79 million tonnes (mt) of the cereal grain. Reform at gunpoint Pakistan's decision to dispense with MSP and government procurement of wheat has been externally forced, part of conditionality linked to an Extended Fund Facility loan of $7,113-million from the IMF, to be disbursed from the 2024-25 to 2027-28 fiscal years (FY: July-June). The so-called memorandum of economic and financial policies, submitted by the Pakistan government to the IMF for availing the loan, has clearly stated that in the case of wheat 'we have abstained from announcing support prices and undertaking provincial procurement operations during the 2025 Rabi season and are committed to continue this approach going forward'. That's not all. The memorandum has also committed to 'winding down PASSCO' under an overall plan to 'phase out federal and provincial government price-setting for agricultural commodities by end-FY26'. Pakistan's Minister for Parliamentary Affairs, Tariq Fazal Chaudhry, confirmed in the National Assembly earlier this month that PASSCO is being 'wound up', as the government isn't any longer buying wheat or regulating its prices. It has already appointed a consultancy firm, TAGM & Co, to assess the total value of PASSCO's warehouses, offices and other assets, and formulate a winding-up plan for the 51-year-old corporation 'within three months'. But it's not just MSP, procurement and PASSCO. The memorandum given to the IMF has promised to review all relevant legislation underpinning government interventions in commodity markets 'by end-December 2025'. These include the Price Control and Prevention of Profiteering and Hoarding Act, 1977 (similar to India's Essential Commodities Act of 1955) and provincial laws such as the Punjab Foodstuffs (Control) Act, 1958 and the Sindh Essential Commodities Price Control and Prevention of Profiteering and Hoarding Act, 2005. If these weren't enough, all the four provinces of Pakistan – Punjab, Sindh, Khyber Pakhtunkhwa and Balochistan – have amended their individual Agriculture Income Tax legislation. These have now been fully aligned with the federal-level personal and corporate income tax regimes applicable for ordinary farmers and commercial agriculture respectively. The amendments will enable taxation of farm incomes to 'commence from January 1, 2025'. The contrast with India India hasn't been under any IMF-guided programme since June 1993, when it borrowed the last tranche of a Standby Arrangement loan of 2,207.925 million SDR (special drawing rights), equivalent to $2,394 million. This loan, taken between April 1991 and June 1993 when the country was facing a balance of payments (BOP) crisis like Pakistan is today, got completely repaid by May 31, 2000. With no IMF conditionality linked to financial assistance, there's no question of any reforms in India being imposed from outside, leave alone at gunpoint. Government agencies here have so far procured almost 30 mt of the 2024-25 wheat crop at the MSP of Rs 2,425 per quintal (the Indian rupee is over 3.3 times the Pakistani rupee). They have further purchased 85.5 mt of paddy (equivalent to 57.3 mt of milled rice) at the MSP of Rs 2,300-2,320 per quintal. Apart from MSP procurement and stocking of grain by FCI, India provides subsidies on fertilisers, electricity for irrigation and canal water, crop credit, insurance premium and other farm inputs. Income from agriculture attracts no tax either. Agriculture reforms in India – especially those leading to distorted cropping patterns (more rice, wheat and sugarcane being grown at the expense of pulses, oilseeds, maize, cotton and millets) and promoting inefficient/excessive use of nitrogen and water – are less likely under any BOP crisis-induced, IMF-dictated external pressure of the sort seen in 1991. The Central government's having to repeal the three farm laws liberalising trade in agricultural produce – which it had pushed through Parliament in September 2020 – demonstrates the limitations of reform by central fiat under the given political economy realities. The impetus to farm reform in India is more likely to come from internal fiscal, as opposed to external BOP, pressures. And that would probably be at an individual state level (Punjab, for instance) rather than from the Centre. Production comparisons The US Department of Agriculture (USDA) expects Pakistan's wheat production in 2024-25 (that crop is now being marketed) at 28.5 mt, down from last year's record 31.44 mt. The decline is due to a reduction in area sown, from 9.6 million to 9.1 million hectares. That, in turn, is attributed to the Pakistan government's decision to discontinue MSP procurement and also dry weather. Since October 2024 and throughout the growing season, rainfall was below average and temperatures well above average. While wheat is a largely irrigated crop, the 2-3 showers normally received during the winter-spring months help in supplementing irrigation water and positively impacting yields. Wheat is Pakistan's staple food, with its per capita consumption of around 124 kg per year being 'one of the highest in the world', according to USDA. The agency projects the country's consumption in 2025-26 at 31.5 mt, which will then necessitate imports. Pakistan was forced to import 3.59 mt in 2023-24 (May-April) and 2.73 mt in the previous marketing year. It's the opposite situation in rice, where Pakistan's annual production of 9.75-9.8 mt is way ahead of domestic consumption of 4.1-4.2 mt. That makes Pakistan an exporter of rice, the world's fourth largest after India, Vietnam and Thailand. Pakistan's rice shipments were at 6.49 mt in 2023-24 and 5.5 mt in 2024-25. The accompanying table shows Pakistan to be a significant producer of wheat, rice, maize and cotton. While its output of these crops is lower than India's, a more appropriate comparison would be with Uttar Pradesh (which has almost the same population) and Punjab (having similar growing conditions). Pakistan scores reasonably on the above counts, although the medium and long-term impact of the IMF-imposed reforms, plus more resources going towards military spending ('guns versus butter'), on its agricultural economy remains to be seen. Harish Damodaran is National Rural Affairs & Agriculture Editor of The Indian Express. A journalist with over 33 years of experience in agri-business and macroeconomic policy reporting and analysis, he has previously worked with the Press Trust of India (1991-94) and The Hindu Business Line (1994-2014). ... Read More

PASSCO: Minister ‘uncovers' nearly Rs1bn corruption
PASSCO: Minister ‘uncovers' nearly Rs1bn corruption

Business Recorder

time30-05-2025

  • Business
  • Business Recorder

PASSCO: Minister ‘uncovers' nearly Rs1bn corruption

ISLAMABAD: Federal Minister for National Food Security and Research Rana Tanveer Hussain on Thursday revealed that corruption amounting to nearly Rs1 billion had been committed within the Pakistan Agricultural Storage and Services Corporation (PASSCO) during wheat procurement operations last year (2024–25). The minister, while briefing the Senate Standing Committee on National Food Security, stated that investigations had confirmed large-scale embezzlement within the state-run procurement body. In response to a query by committee chairman Senator Syed Masroor Ahsan, Hussain disclosed that the federal government, under directives from Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif, has decided to dissolve PASSCO and establish a new institution in its place. Officials from PASSCO briefed the committee on wheat procurement activities, noting that the target for the year 2024-25 had been set at 1.8 million tons, of which, 1.785 million tons were successfully procured. They further informed the committee that as of April 28, 2025, the organisation holds wheat stocks amounting to approximately 2.43 million metric tons. However, no procurement target for 2025 has yet been issued by the federal government. Addressing the corruption issue, PASSCO officials said investigations had been initiated against 249 employees, including two senior general managers. Disciplinary actions included the termination of one officer, forced retirement of another, and withholding of salary increments for two others. Concerns were also raised over wheat stock conditions in Balochistan. Senator Danesh Kumar warned of an impending crisis if wheat procurement is not undertaken promptly, noting that some stocks in the province have already spoiled. Minister Hussain confirmed the deterioration of certain wheat stocks in Balochistan. The committee was briefed on the alarming spread of counterfeit seeds in the country. The director general (DG) Federal Seed Certification and Registration Department (FSC&RD) informed the committee about ongoing actions against companies and officials involved in the sale of fake seeds, which pose a serious threat to food security. The DG told the committee that following the third-party audits, out of 1,200 registered seed companies registered, nearly 400 companies were found involved in selling fake seeds and their registrations been cancelled. Between 2020 and 2024, over 2,700 challans were issued to fake seed sellers, he said. He said that efforts are underway to improve access to quality seeds, including the import of certified and hybrid seeds, particularly for cotton. The minister assured that visible improvements will be seen in the agriculture ministry's performance within six months. Senators Rahat Jamali, Abdul Waseh, Danesh Kumar and senior officials from the Ministry of National Food Security and Research also attended the meeting. Copyright Business Recorder, 2025

PASSCO's wheat reserves will not be released into open market: minister
PASSCO's wheat reserves will not be released into open market: minister

Business Recorder

time28-05-2025

  • Business
  • Business Recorder

PASSCO's wheat reserves will not be released into open market: minister

ISLAMABAD: Federal Minister for National Food Security and Research Rana Tanveer Hussain said on Tuesday that the government will not release Pakistan Agricultural Storage and Services Corporation (PASSCO)'s strategic wheat reserves into the open market, reaffirming the government's commitment to ensuring national food security. Speaking during a meeting with representatives of farmer unions, the minister clarified that PASSCO's reserves are meant strictly for emergency situations. 'These reserves are maintained strictly for emergency situations and food security purposes,' Hussain said. Federal govt is no longer setting wheat prices, pulls plug on Passco 'Ensuring the food security of our population remains the top priority of the government.' In addition to addressing concerns over wheat availability, the minister also discussed the government's efforts to boost maize exports. He said that Pakistan is actively engaging with several countries to expand export markets for maize through diplomatic and trade-level initiatives. These efforts, he noted, are expected to yield positive results for the farming community and bolster the national economy. 'Pakistan's maize has high potential in international markets due to its quality and competitive pricing,' Hussain said. He added that the government is improving storage, logistics, and value chain mechanisms to support export efficiency. The minister also briefed the farmer representatives on various government initiatives aimed at enhancing agricultural productivity. These include improving farmers' access to quality seeds, modern machinery, and affordable fertilisers. He reiterated the government's resolve to address the grievances of the farming community through policy reforms and public-private partnerships. Copyright Business Recorder, 2025

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