Saturday, December 31, 2011
Cut on agri inputs demanded to halt price hike
* Policy forum calls for no more political point scoring, reduction in food prices
* Flour price rose by 78%, sugar 160%, meat 103%, oil 66% and vegetables 39%
Staff Report
ISLAMABAD: Civil society, academia and media representatives here on Friday demanded reduction in taxes on agriculture inputs and packed food items coupled with effective price control mechanism to save people from food price hike and hunger.
They made these suggestions at a day-long policy forum on “Food Price Volatility and Policy Options”, jointly organised by Actionaid and Oxfam GB in collaboration with Pakistan Kissan Ittehad and Sustainable Agriculture Action Group (SAAG).
They were of the view that the government should invest more in agriculture sector. They urged upon the government to come up with food security policy to ensure that 50 percent poor people get food and small farmers are protected. They cited the India Food Bill that enables 70 percent of rural and 60 percent of urban Indian poor to get food on nominal prices.
Mahnaz Ajmal Paracha from Oxfam GB called upon all stakeholders, civil society, media, consumers groups and academia to play their role and create critical mass to check price hike. She said there was need to bridge research, policy and practice gap. She said the food price hike was causing increased hunger and malnutrition, especially among women and children, threats to the economic recovery of the local people, reduction in purchasing power of people thus risking their social stability. She said households were spending more than 65 percent of their income on food, cutting expenditure on non-food such as education and health.
Nasir Aziz from Actionaid said higher food prices hurt poor and their coping mechanisms. He said poor families were now forced to eat cheaper foods with lower nutritional value, consume less food in meals or even skip meals at times.
Aftab Alm from Actionaid said it was alarming to note that during last three years prices of wheat flour rose to 78 percent, while sugar price increased by over 160 percent, meat by 103 percent, pulses 89 percent, milk 85 percent, rice 44 percent, vegetable oil by 66 percent and vegetable by 39 percent. He said due to price hike millions of more people were plunged into poverty.
Muhammad Amin, agriculture policy analyst from the government, said the government through its resources provided support price mechanism to protect farmers from any price fluctuation impacts. He called for regulating the role of middlemen so that they cannot exploit farmers. He also suggested an enhanced role of agriculture extension services and credit mechanism to facilitate farmers.
Dr Shahid Zia, a senior policy expert on food and agriculture, called upon civil society to form an Independent Civil Society Commission on Agriculture to develop a long-term vision for agriculture and food price mechanism. He also suggested sorting out once for all the agriculture sector tax issue. He said small farmers having less than 25 acres of land should be exempted from any tax while tax can be introduced on the basis of land holding above 25 acres. He said the provincial governments could tax on different slabs such as 25-50 acres and 50 acres and more.
Shafqat Munir, policy analyst and campaigner said there was a need for a social movement by all consumers to ensure that their demands for price control should not be politicized either by the government or the opposition for the sake of point scoring. He said opposition instead of becoming part of solution becomes part of problem to fan hatred against sitting governments for their vested interests while the governments do not take people’s voices seriously considering it a conspiracy against them by the opposition. “Price hike is not political; it is a national issue of policy formulation. Each political or administrative force is responsible to control price hike. They need to take the issue up as a national issue and not a political stunt against each other,” he added.
Courtesy www.dailytimes.com.pk
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