No intent to control sugar sector; just helping mills clear cane arrears via MSP: Govt

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The Centre does not want to regulate the sugar sector and has fixed the minimum selling price for the sweetener, as also stock limits on mills, only in the interest of farmers, consumers as well as small units, a senior food ministry official said today.
The official also ruled out any increase in the minimum selling price of sugar and wondered as to why consumers will pay more in a glut market.
To bailout the cash-starved sugar industry, the government had last week decided to create a buffer stock of three million tonnes and fixed minimum selling price of sugar besides imposing monthly stock limit on mills.
Sugar industry bodies like ISMA and NFCSF have demanded higher minimum selling price of sugar saying that Rs 29/kg is inadequate to cover the production cost which is at around Rs 34-36/kg.
"The floor price cannot be the maximum price. Mills were selling at Rs 25/kg, now the minimum selling price has been fixed at Rs 29/kg. They are gaining Rs 4/kg. This is a decent price in the current scenario," the official said.
The minimum ex-mill price cannot been raised further. "Tomorrow, the government can be accused for helping mills at the cost of consumers," the official noted.
If the floor price is fixed at Rs 35/kg, mills will gain Rs 7-8 per kg but then the retail price will rise to Rs 44 per kg. "Why in a glut season, consumer have to pay high. Let consumers also get some benefit."
"The government is ready to withdraw and let them go back to Rs 25 per kg and no stock limits. Let them choose."
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First Published: Jun 11 2018 | 4:55 PM IST