Nepal: Twenty years ago in 2001, Nepal
used to buy $11.84 million worth of food and farm products annually from its
next door neighbour India.
By 2021, the food
import bill had ballooned by 78 times to nearly $1 billion as Nepalis splurged
their remittance income.
Over the past few years, the scale of food imports,
particularly from India,
has turned into a full-blown emergency, which experts say is a potential threat
to national security.
“Obviously, the import figure for foods is scary. It not
only points to a growing dependency trend, but also signals a potential threat
to food security,” trade expert Purushottam Ojha told the Post.
“For a country like Nepal, a foreign exchange crisis
can unfold anytime. Remittance, which funds the consumption, can drop too. How
will you pay for food when you don’t produce it? It’s an emerging threat.”
“We have already seen the 2015 blockade when India cut off
our supply of fuel, for which we are totally dependent on imports,” added Ojha.
Experts say the peril of
relying on imports is being exhibited in Sri Lanka which depends
on imported essential goods, but is struggling to pay for them
due to its weak export performance after tourism collapsed due to the Covid-19
pandemic.
According to the statistics of
the Agricultural and Processed Food Products Export Development Authority, India’s apex export trade promotion body,
exports of agro food products to Nepal totalled $938,317,826
(Rs112.59 billion) in the fiscal year 2020-21 ending March 31, 2021.
Food imports from India soared by a staggering 39 percent
year-on-year in 2020-21, the highest growth on record, as Nepal imposed the
first coronavirus lockdown on March 24, 2020.
Imports swelled during the first stay-home order because
farmers were prevented from taking their produce to market. Rama Shankar Kushwaha
and other farmers of Birgunj were beaten for violating the
lockdown as they were headed for the market because traders stopped coming to
their farms to buy their harvests like before.
Nepali farmers watched their vegetables rot in the fields
while convoys of 15-20 trucks laden with fresh produce from India crossed
the border daily and raced to the bazaars. The four-month-long lockdown ended
in July 2020.
"Over the years, Nepal’s
exports have been in free fall while imports have skyrocketed, which is deeply
worrying," said Ojha, who is also a former commerce secretary. “As Nepal failed to
substitute imports, it became a net food importer in recent decades.”
In countries like Nepal, which buy a lot of their
food needs from abroad, a food crisis could be closer than
imagined.
A breakdown in the supply chain could result in a year of
hyperinflation—when prices increase rapidly and go out of control, economists
warn.
Nepal's largest food import is rice.
“Obviously, it’s rice. We did not change our eating habits.
Now, even in the villages, people are buying food because it’s easily available
if you have money,” said agro economist Krishna Prasad Pant. “We are in an
import trap because we are exporting our manpower.”
The Indian government’s trade statistics show that the
largest export to Nepal
among food items is non-basmati rice.
Nepal is the second largest importer of
Indian non-basmati rice after Benin,
a West African country.
Rice imports totalled a staggering $402.91 million,
including basmati rice worth $6.90 million. In terms of quantity, Nepal bought
1.29 million tonnes of rice.
Two decades ago, rice imports amounted to 8,025 tonnes worth
$1.74 million.
According to a research paper titled
"Nepal's growing dependency on food imports: A threat to national sovereignty
and ways forward", importing some agricultural commodities to meet the
domestic demand has become a common practice in a globalised economy; however,
it can be a serious issue when exports from the country remain stagnant or
decline while the imports jump at an alarming rate.
This increases the country’s dependency on foreign countries
and could potentially create non-military threats to national security and
sovereignty.
And there is a new import trend now.
Indian government statistics show that Nepal is also
becoming dependent on processed agricultural goods at a fast rate. Imports of
processed food in 2020-21 reached 101,391 tonnes, a ten-fold jump over the
previous year.
Nepal is in the sixth position for India’s overall
exports of processed agro goods, with imports valued at Rs2.50 billion.
Processed agricultural goods include mushrooms and truffles,
green pepper in brine, dried truffles, asparagus dried, dehydrated garlic
powder, garlic dried, potatoes dried, grams, onion preserved, sweet corn, green
and lime beans.
“Even remote villages that used to be domestically supplied
are now largely reliant on imported food like rice, wheat flour and lentils
from India,”
said Pant.
According to Pant, among
many factors driving food imports from India, one is the bilateral
Nepal-India trade treaty of 1996. The treaty allows duty-free access to primary
agriculture products on a reciprocal basis.
“This policy allows the entry of Indian goods to Nepal which are far cheaper because of the
heavily subsidised agriculture sector in India,” said Pant. “Nepali products
fail to compete with such products from India. And obviously, people choose
to buy cheaper Indian goods.”
“Nepal’s
agriculture sector has been in the doldrums for years. In fact, it was a flawed
policy. Nepal
was a poor country and would require duty-free access,” he added. “But why Nepal granted duty-free access to India is still
questionable.”
Jagannath Adhikari, who authored the research paper and
writes extensively on resource management, agriculture and development issues,
agrees.
The paper says, “Expanding the market network for
agricultural commodities in foreign markets was an obvious choice, and the 1996
Trade Treaty between India
and Nepal was just part of
the broader strategies of India.
Interestingly, while India
thrived on the success of higher productivity of their agricultural
commodities, Nepal
reversed the role of being a net food exporter to a net food importer within
this period.”
The situation that Nepal is experiencing now in terms of food
imports is akin to what India
had faced until the 1960s, according to the paper.
Nepal exported more food than it imported
until the early 1980s. It started to become a net importer of food,
particularly cereals, from the early 1980s, according to the paper. “But until
2002, the import was only marginal--remaining at most just 1.3 percent of the
available food.”
By the 1990s, India was rebounding with higher
productivity and volume in agricultural commodities, mainly riding on the success
of the Green Revolution and favourable policies and support from the government
in the agricultural sector. India’s
competitive advantage simply overwhelmed Nepal.
The paper says that the multi-party democratic system
established in 1990 faced a major setback after the country went through
frequent government changes and political rifts, which eventually led to
political instability and a decade-long Maoist insurgency from 1996 to 2006.
The most devastating impact of the Maoist war was visible in
the agriculture and food systems of Nepal. Private investment in
farming started to decline significantly due to the conflict.
The Agricultural Perspective Plan of 1995, which guided Nepal’s
agriculture for two decades, too was a flawed policy, experts say.
As reliance on the market for food and consumer goods
increased, so did the competitive advantage of India in supplying foods and other
household goods.
Agro
economist Pant said that Nepal
should produce food that is not grown in India.
“Nepal
has many such products,” he said. "Let the farmers of Ilam produce chayote
squash and farmers of Palpa produce pears on a massive scale."
Once farmers struggled to sell chayote squash, now they are
fetching Rs50 per kg in the Indian market. " “Tonnes of the vegetable is
supplied to Siliguri, India,” he said.
Ojha said when Nepali agriculture failed to make a good
profit, the youths started to move abroad.
“Now the remittance money is huge. People have the option to
buy. They don’t produce,” said Ojha.
According to Ojha,
Nepal's
agriculture system has been plagued not only by faulty policies, but by
political actors too who grossly misused the subsidies running into billions of
rupees.
“Political party members and cadres enjoyed the
subsidies—and they still are enjoying them—while the real farmers have to stand
in long queues every year to buy chemical fertiliser,” said Ojha. “This miserable
agriculture scenario has continued for years. Today, purchasing food is cheaper
than growing it.”
Sangam Prasain
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