People's Democracy(Weekly Organ of the Communist Party of India (Marxist) |
Vol.
XXVI No. 51 December 29,2002 |
Sugarcane
Growers
Are
Getting
Ruined
N K Shukla
TODAY,
sugarcane
growers
are
perforce
adopting
the
path
of
agitation.
This
is
not
only
for
getting
remunerative
prices
of
their
cane
and
for
payment
of
huge
arrears
pending
with
sugar
mills,
but
also
for
getting
the
cane
lifted
from
their
fields
which
they
have
to
prepare
for
rabi
sowing.
On
the
other
had,
sugar
mills
are
refusing
to
pay
the
state-advised
price
(SAP).
For
years,
it
has
been
the
practice
of
the
state
governments
to
declare
the
SAP
every
year,
after
the
central
government
declares
the
statutory
minimum
price
(SMP).
Generally,
the
SAP
used
to
be
higher
than
the
SMP
by
one
third
because
of
the
local
conditions,
cost
increases,
etc.
Declaration
of
the
SAP
became
necessary
because
the
central
government
deliberately
kept
the
SMP
extremely
low,
without
doing
proper
calculations
about
the
increase
in
prices
of
inputs,
etc.
The
central
government
used
to
keep
the
SMP
deliberately
low,
also
because
it
had
to
pay
to
the
sugar
mills
for
the
levy
sugar
it
used
to
purchase
for
the
public
distribution
system
(PDS).
This
year
too,
on
August
5,
the
central
government
announced
an
SMP
for
the
2002-03
crushing
season.
It
is
Rs
64.50
per
quintal
for
a
basic
recovery
rate
of
8.5
per
cent
---
an
increase
of
Rs
2.45
per
quintal
over
last
year.
Then,
a
premium
of
Rs
0.76
per
quintal
to
be
given
for
every
0.1
per
cent
increase
in
recovery.
The
total
may
thus
go
up
to
Rs
73
per
quintal.
After
a
prime
ministerial
announcement
hiked
the
MSP
by
Rs
5,
to
69.50
a
quintal,
in
order
to
quell
the
growing
peasant
discontent
if
they
can
(the
police
firing
on
agitating
cane
growers
even
claimed
two
lives
in
Basti
district
of
UP),
the
total
may
now
reach
Rs
78
per
quintal.
Still
this
is
way
below
what
a
peasant
should
get
for
his
cane.
Be
that
as
it
may,
following
the
established
convention,
this
year
too
the
state
governments
announced
their
SAPs,
adding
approximately
one
third
to
the
SMP.
But
in
same
states,
millowners
have
even
gone
to
the
court,
opposing
these
SAPs.
As
for
defending
the
cane
growers,
the
central
government
is
conspicuous
by
its
silence.
Previously,
if
the
mills
did
not
much
resist
the
SAPs,
it
was
because
they
used
to
get
a
good
amount
from
the
centre
for
levy
sugar,
for
the
buffer
stock
of
sugar
(20
lakh
tonnes)
and
as
rent
for
keeping
it
in
their
godowns.
But
now,
in
its
hot
pursuit
of
the
policy
of
liberalisation,
the
centre
has
almost
dismantled
the
public
distribution
system.
It
is
now
lifting
less
and
less
sugar
and
also
dismantling
the
buffer
stock.
Moreover,
it
has
allowed
unrestricted
import
of
sugar,
creating
panic
and
chaos
in
the
sugar
industry.
Wrong
parameters
were
applied
to
determine
the
BPL
(below
poverty
line)
and
APL
(above
poverty
line)
people,
leading
to
exclusion
of
a
majority
of
the
poor
and
marginal,
apart
from
workers
and
most
of
the
employees
(including
the
fourth
grade
employees),
from
the
public
distribution
system.
At
the
same
time,
the
issue
price
of
sugar
was
increased.
This
brought
the
sugar
price
in
ration
shops
almost
to
the
level
of
open
market
prices.
In
this
situation,
there
are
only
a
few
to
purchase
sugar
from
the
PDS
shops.
Evidently,
these
are
deliberate
attempts
to
weaken
and
dismantle
the
PDS.
On
August
1
this
year,
just
one
month
before
the
beginning
of
the
sugar
crushing
season,
the
total
closing
stock
was
156.95
lakh
tonnes
even
after
an
offtake
of
131.12
lakh
tonnes
for
internal
consumption
(both
levy
and
free
market)
and
7.06
lakh
tonnes
for
export.
This
was
higher
than
the
closing
stock
of
144.57
lakh
tonnes
on
this
very
date
last
year.
Yet
import
of
sugar
was
allowed
from
Brazil,
Pakistan
and
other
countries.
Why?
There remain some other questions also: Why are the regulations on the sugar industry being given up? Why is the 20 lakh tonne buffer stock of sugar being dismantled despite the bad experience of 1978, and of 1994-95? Is it not to help the MNCs even if it harms our indigenous production base and ruins our cane growers?
Another
question
is:
How
many
times
has
the
government
used
the
1968
act
regarding
the
payment
of
arrears,
to
help
the
cane
growers?
The
central
government
collects
Rs
140
per
tonne
from
sugar
mills
as
cess,
and
out
of
that
it
pays
Rs
90
towards
maintenance
of
the
buffer
stock
that
is
operating
since
1982.
Now,
if
the
centre
has
collected
Rs
3013.23
crore
as
cess
since
1982,
will
it
tell
how
much
it
has
spent
to
help
the
cane
growers,
how
much
to
maintain
the
buffer
stock,
how
much
to
help
in
modernising
the
mills,
and
how
much
for
paying
the
arrears
the
mills
owe
to
growers?
The
government’s
faithfulness
to
the
policy
of
liberalisation
is
so
great
that
it
is
out
to
close
down
even
the
National
Institute
of
Sugarcane
and
Sugar
Technology
that
was
set
up
in
Mau
(UP)
to
help
the
growers
and
mills.
On
the
other
hand,
if
the
central
government’s
intention
is
to
do
away
with
the
SAPs,
why
cannot
it
itself
raises
the
SMP
to
above
Rs
100
per
quintal
for
this
year,
create
a
buffer
stock
and
reorganise
the
PDS
to
cover
all
the
vulnerable
sections
of
population?
After
all,
such
measures
will
help
all
---
the
sugar
mills,
cane
growers
and
consumers.
Evidently,
the
central
government,
which
has
shown
sufficient
will
power
to
help
the
MNCs,
lacks
the
will
to
stop
the
unrestricted
imports
and
help
our
national
economy.
This
leaves
for
the
growers
no
option
but
to
fight.