Re-working the subsidy

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| It is in this context that one needs to view Mr Chidambaram's budgetary proposal for finding an alternative method of delivering the subsidy directly to farmers, rather than to the manufacturers of fertilisers. The view is that the subsidy today serves to protect inefficient fertiliser manufacturers, and not the farmer. Nevertheless, the fertiliser industry is likely to welcome a change, largely because the scope for claiming excessive subsidy payments by gold-plating plants (i.e. building in additional, unreported capacity) has been largely plugged through a reassessment of the actual capacity of each plant. In fact, the more efficient segment of the industry, represented by the fertiliser co-operative Iffco, has already demanded a change in the mechanism for delivering the subsidy. The industry's main argument in favour of this is that it should not be forced to perform the government's job of delivering the subsidy, and that too when subsidy payments from the government are delayed and irregular. The government benefits in that it puts an end to some of the distortions that have crept in because of the way in which the subsidy is calculated. |
| While this means that both the government and most of the industry would welcome a modification of the subsidy model, what cannot be overlooked is the track record of the official machinery in delivering benefits to clearly targeted individuals. From that viewpoint, Mr Chidambaram is right in stipulating that an alternative system should first be tried out on a pilot basis in one district in each state. One of the suggestions that has come from the noted agricultural expert, M S Swaminathan, is to introduce a smart card that enables farmers to buy not only urea but other major and micro plant nutrients as well, depending on the requirement of the crop and the soil. The added advantage of such a move would be that the subsidy-driven imbalance in the use of fertiliser nutrients, which today is ruining soil health, will tend to get rectified. However, regardless of the manner chosen to hand down the subsidy, care would have to be taken to ensure that it reaches the intended recipients and is not misappropriated on its way down. |
First Published: Mar 02 2007 | 12:00 AM IST