Impact of Covid -19 on marketing of vegetables in the Amritsar district of Punjab
Alwinder Kaur,
Harwinder Singh,
Lavleen Kaur,
Surbhi Bansal and
Parul Barwal
Indian Journal of Agricultural Marketing, 2023, vol. 37, issue 2
Abstract:
Due to the lockdown, there were restrictions on the number of farmers allowed into the mandis and the quantity each farmer could sell on any day. This resulted in distressed sales by producers, ad customer also paid higher prices due to low availability of vegetables. The present study attempted to determine the impact of Covid-19 lockdown on marketing of vegetables. The primary data have been collected from 190 farmers, 10 wholesalers and 20 retailers for the period of 2021-22.The study found that all economic activities witnessed a negative growth rate during the April - June quarter of 2020, except for the agriculture and allied sector, which grew at 3.3 per cent. There was decline in the prices and arrivals of tomato and onion during lockdown. On the contrary, potato prices increased during lockdown as potato sowing was delayed by almost a month due to heavy rainfall in 2019. During lockdown, the decrease in marketing efficiency was maximum in marketing channel I (producer- wholesaler-retailer-consumer). It decreased to 0.28, 0.6 and 0.38 in lockdown year from 0.71, 0.77 and 0.83 in pre lockdown year for tomato, potato and onion, respectively. The overall major problems perceived by the vegetable grower were Covid-related restrictions (86.84 per cent), followed by costly labour (81.05 per cent), transportation problem (77.37 per cent) and fluctuation in prices (74.21 per cent), respectively. The study suggested that to increase the producer share in consumers’ rupee there should be direct delivery of food grains, vegetables, and fruits to consumers. It can be done through SHGs, FPOs and cooperative marketing. Additional funding should be allocated to agriculture in order to develop the infrastructure of the supply chain, which includes storage, warehousing, refrigerated transport, etc. This would assist farmers withstand shocks. Post-harvest management of tomato, onion and potato should be prioritized to promote vegetable production.
Keywords: Crop; Production/Industries (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Date: 2023
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Persistent link: https://EconPapers.repec.org/RePEc:ags:injagm:399888
DOI: 10.22004/ag.econ.399888
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