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Backwards and forwards

Abhijit Sen committee is perhaps a unique one in the annals of India’s babudom — its members had a different view from the well-known economist who headed this committee.

Updated on: May 05, 2008 12:10 AM IST
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Is the UPA government any wiser after the Abhijit Sen committee submitted its report on whether forward trading has impacted agricultural prices? Will it now ban such trading as demanded by the Left parties? The Sen committee’s brief was not to recommend a ban but to investigate the influence of futures trading on the prices of essential commodities. This it did for 24 agricultural commodities, but its findings are somewhat ambiguous — like most bureaucratic exertions, perhaps — to instruct the government on what to do. Perhaps the UPA wanted it only this way, as there are deep-seated divisions even within the Cabinet on the advisability of banning futures trading.

HT Image
HT Image

This committee is perhaps a unique one in the annals of India’s babudom — its members had a different view from the well-known economist who headed this committee. Three members, in fact, submitted separate notes to the common main report. As if that weren’t bad enough, Mr Sen submitted his own individual note. With this bizarre state of affairs, what is the sanctity of the committee’s findings? “Indian data analysed in this report does not show any clear evidence of either reduced or increased volatility of spot prices due to futures trading,” it noted. Also that the period “during which futures trading has been in operation is too short to discriminate adequately between the effect of opening up of futures markets and what might be the normal cyclical adjustment.” Figure that one out.

 
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