APP Users: If unable to download, please re-install our APP.
Only logged in User can create notes
Only logged in User can create notes

General Studies 3 >> Agriculture

audio may take few seconds to load

TERMS OF TRADE

TERMS OF TRADE

 
 
1. Context
Terms of trade (ToT) for Indian agriculture — movement in prices of farm commodities relative to that of non-farm goods and services — have recorded significant improvement in the last decade and a half, going by data derived from national income statistics
 
2. Terms of Trade (ToT)
  • Terms of Trade (ToT) refers to the ratio between a country's export prices and its import prices. It's a measure used to assess the relative strength of a nation's export sector against its import sector.
  • Improvement in the terms of trade means that a country can buy more imports for the same quantity of exports, or it needs to export fewer goods to buy a given quantity of imports. Conversely, a decline in terms of trade implies that a country must export more goods to maintain the same level of imports.
  • Factors influencing terms of trade include changes in export and import prices, exchange rates, inflation rates, and productivity changes in various industries. Countries aim to achieve favorable terms of trade to enhance their economic well-being by maximizing their purchasing power for imports using their exports.
  • For example, if a country exports oil and the price of oil increases globally, this might improve its terms of trade because it can buy more goods with the same amount of oil exports. However, if the prices of the goods a country imports rise faster than the prices of its exports, its terms of trade may worsen
  • The Terms of Trade (ToT) serves as a gauge for a nation's economic well-being, yet its interpretation can sometimes be misleading. Fluctuations in import and export prices directly influence the ToT, emphasizing the importance of understanding the reasons behind price shifts. To monitor economies, ToT measurements are often logged in an index.
  • A positive shift in a country's ToT generally signifies that export prices rose while import prices either stayed the same or declined.
  • Conversely, it could mean that although export prices decreased, the reduction wasn't as significant as the drop in import prices.
  • Another scenario might involve stable export prices alongside decreasing import prices or a situation where export prices increased at a faster rate than import prices. These diverse circumstances can all contribute to an enhanced ToT
3. Significance of ToT
  • The ToT based on implicit price deflators is a broad-based indicator of how prices for agricultural commodities have moved vis-à-vis for non-agricultural goods and services.
  • It does not show whether and how much the ToT has improved for those actually engaged in crop production: farmers and agricultural labourers.
    The Agriculture Ministry maintains data on both the prices received by farmers for the produce they sell and the prices paid for the products bought by them.
  • The latter includes final consumption items (from purchased foods to toilet soap, toothpaste, medicines, mobile services, two-wheelers and gold jewellery), intermediate inputs (seed, fertiliser, pesticides, livestock feed, irrigation charges, diesel, hired labour, marketing costs and interest on loans) and capital goods (tractors, electric motor/pumps, cement, bricks, steel and other construction materials).
    Based on the above, the Ministry has constructed year-wise indices of prices received (IPR) and prices paid (IPP) with the three years ended 2011-12=100 as base value.
  • The ToT for farmers is the ratio of IPR to IPP. A ratio above one (or 100%) implies their enjoying favourable pricing power, in terms of what they sell versus what they buy. A ToT ratio below one indicates unfavourable conditions of exchange
4. Statistics on ToT
  • The Ministry has, likewise, constructed year-wise IPR for agricultural labourers, which is basically wages received by them.
  • The IPP in their case is only for final consumption items. Agricultural workers, unlike farmers, have just their labour power to sell, with the money from it also mainly spent on consumption goods.
    The farmers’ ToT ratio went up significantly — by 17.3%, from 87.8 to 102.9 — between 2004-05 and 2010-11. It has, however, fallen thereafter and stagnated at 97-99 levels.
  • The agricultural labourers’ ToT ratio rose more spectacularly, by 109.2% from a mere 64.2 in 2004-05 to 134.4 in 2016-17. But even it has registered a decline to 119.5 in the last computed year of 2021-22.
    Simply put, while the ToT for the farm sector as a whole may have improved since the mid-2000s, it has been more for agricultural labourers than for farmers.
  • Moreover, the last few years have been marked by stagnation or deterioration for both.
    Agricultural labourers  a big chunk of them from Dalit, Adivasi or Most Backward Classes backgrounds  have historically occupied the bottom-most rung of India’s socioeconomic ladder.
  • Accelerated growth in the wider economy from around 2003-04 helped create new employment avenues for them outside of agriculture, particularly in construction and the urban services sector.
  • Together with parallel government interventions such as the Mahatma Gandhi National Rural Employment Guarantee Act and the targeted public distribution system, it led to a tightening of labour markets.
  • Farm workers, in the process, discovered hitherto non-existent alternatives (“opportunity cost”) to transplanting paddy, harvesting sugarcane, picking cotton, spraying insecticides or removing weeds in fields.
  • The resultant rise in real wages for agricultural labourers, also reflected in their ToT, has impacted farmers.
  • They have been squeezed between higher costs  for not just hired labour, but also agro-chemicals, seed, feed, diesel, tractors and farm machinery, and other inputs and no commensurate increase in produce prices.
  • Subsidies on fertiliser, electricity/canal irrigation charges, agricultural credit and crop insurance may have partly protected farmers from rising production costs, just as MSP procurement has ensured stable realisations in select crops like paddy, wheat and sugarcane.
  • But even after factoring these, the ToT for farmers has stagnated at best in the last 10 years. That, along with not many new crop yield breakthroughs and fragmentation of landholdings, probably also explains the clamour for reservations in government jobs and educational institutions by Marathas, Jats, Patidars, Kapus and other dominant agrarian communities.
  • Even for agricultural laborers, the ToT ratio, while still favourable, has fallen after 2018-19. This is reflected in rural wages, too, hardly rising in real terms after adjusting for inflation
5. What do Terms of Trade (ToT) mean for farmers and farm workers?
  • The Terms of Trade (ToT) can significantly impact farmers and farm workers. When the ToT is favorable, meaning that the prices farmers receive for their agricultural products increase relative to the prices of the goods they need to purchase (like machinery, fertilizers, or imported goods), it generally benefits them.
  • A favorable ToT allows farmers to potentially earn more for their produce while spending less on inputs, thereby improving their income and profitability.
  • Conversely, an unfavorable ToT can pose challenges. If the prices of what farmers produce decrease compared to the prices they pay for essential goods, it can squeeze their profit margins.
  • This situation may lead to financial strain, affecting both farmers and farm workers. They might have to work harder or find ways to optimize their production processes to offset the reduced profitability.
  • Additionally, fluctuations in the ToT can impact the overall agricultural sector. Changes in export and import prices can influence demand for agricultural products domestically and internationally, which, in turn, affects farmers' livelihoods and the employment opportunities available for farm workers.
  • Government policies related to trade, subsidies, tariffs, and international agreements also play a role in shaping the ToT and subsequently impact the incomes and livelihoods of farmers and farm workers
6. Way forward
ToT can be calculated using so-called implicit price deflators. Gross Value Added (GVA) — the value of all goods and services produced in an economy minus the value of their inputs consumed during a given year, net of product taxes and subsidies — is estimated at both current and constant prices. Current prices are price levels for the given year, while constant prices are those that prevailed during a fixed “base” year
 
 
For Prelims: Economic and Social Development
For Mains: General Studies III: Indian Economy and issues relating to planning, mobilization, of resources, growth, development and employment
Source: indianexpress

Share to Social