City
Epaper

People struggle as prices of vegetables, grains shoot through roof in mandis

By IANS | Updated: October 8, 2022 11:30 IST

Noida, Oct 8 Skyrocketing prices of essentials has dealt a heavy blow to the public already struggling to ...

Open in App

Noida, Oct 8 Skyrocketing prices of essentials has dealt a heavy blow to the public already struggling to recover from the repercussions of the Covid-induced lockdowns imposed in phases since early 2020.

Be it vegetables or foodgrains, the prices have touched the roof right from taking them out of the farms to reaching the common man's kitchen.

Prices increase manifold by the time it reaches the consumer from the farms via markets, wholesaler and the vendors.

The farmer grows vegetables in the field and sells it in the government-mandated markets (mandis), but a lot of expenses get incurred while bringing these to the mandi like the transportation charges while taking it to the arhtiya or commission agent.

In Uttar Pradesh's mandi committees, 2.5 per cent money is paid for the goods of the farmers, while arhtiya also charges 2.5 per cent as commission. Here itself, the price of the vegetable increases by 5 per cent.

To provide relief to the farmers, the Uttar Pradesh government has reduced the mandi committee rates from 2.5 to 1.5 per cent. That is, farmers now have to pay only 4 per cent of the total price instead of the earlier 5 per cent.

Despite this, by the time the goods coming out of the farm reach the kitchen of the common man, its price hits the roof.

In the market committees, the foodgrains are sold to big and wholesale traders besides the retailers who recover the cost of transportation and the packaging of the goods to be sold and the overall cost of foodgrains.

Right from the farm to reaching the kitchen of the common man, the price of a product costing Rs 10 goes up to Rs 25 to 30. Bad weather, transporters' stir, hiked petrol and diesel prices lead to increased prices of goods.

The journey from the farm to the kitchen is costing more by the day and the budget of the common man is continuously shrinking.

S.P. Yadav, an arhtiya in Ghaziabad mandi, told that when the farmer reaches the mandi with his goods, he brings it here by adding the price of the farm, money spent by labour and the money spent by bringing it to the market.

The commission agent takes 2.5 per cent commission from the farmers and the market committee takes 1.5 per cent after which the price of the goods start increasing.

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

Open in App

Related Stories

CricketOllie Pope continues sub-par second innings run following cheap dismissal at Lord's

InternationalDhaka: CNG drivers block Banani roads as a sign of protest

TechnologyGUJCOST opens registrations for ROBOFEST Gujarat 5.0

EntertainmentSydney Sweeney tapped to play the next Bond girl

NationalGUJCOST opens registrations for ROBOFEST Gujarat 5.0

International Realted Stories

InternationalDubai: Consul General Sivan meets MP CM Mohan Yadav ahead of investment outreach

InternationalSouth Korea: Medical students announce return to school after 17-month boycott

InternationalAxiom-4 splash down on July 15 at 3 pm: Jitendra Singh on Shubhanshu Shukla's return

InternationalMexico calls new US tariffs unfair, launches bilateral negotiations

InternationalS. Korean PM welcomes protesting medical students' decision to return to school