Rahul Sharma (Editor)

Essential Commodities Act

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Citation
  
Act No. 10 of 1955

Enacted by
  
Parliament of India

Territorial extent
  
The whole of India

Essential Commodities Act

The Essential Commodities Act is an act of Parliament of India which was established to ensure the delivery of certain commodities or products, the supply of which if obstructed owing to hoarding or blackmarketing would affect the normal life of the people. This includes foodstuff, drugs, fuel (petroleum products) etc.

The ECA was enacted way back in 1955. It has since been used by the Government to regulate the production, supply and distribution of a whole host of commodities it declares ‘essential’in order to make them available to consumers at fair prices.

The list of items under the Act include drugs, fertilisers, pulses and edible oils, and petroleum and petroleum products. The Centre can include new commodities as and when the need arises, and take them off the list once the situation improves.

Here’s how it works. If the Centre finds that a certain commodity is in short supply and its price is spiking, it can notify stock-holding limits on it for a specified period. The States act on this notification to specify limits and take steps to ensure that these are adhered to. Anybody trading or dealing in a commodity , be it wholesalers, retailers or even importers are prevented from stockpiling it beyond a certain quantity.

A State can, however, choose not to impose any restrictions. But once it does, traders have to immediately sell into the market any stocks held beyond the mandated quantity. This improves supplies and brings down prices. As not all shopkeepers and traders comply, State agencies conduct raids to get everyone to toe the line and the errant are punished. The excess stocks are auctioned or sold through fair price shops.

Importance

The ECA gives consumers protection against irrational spikes in prices of essential commodities. The Government has invoked the Act umpteen times to ensure adequate supplies. It cracks down on hoarders and black-marketeers of such commodities.

But there is another side to the story. Given that almost all crops are seasonal, ensuring round-the-clock supply requires adequate build-up of stocks during the season. So, it may not always be possible to differentiate between genuine stock build-up and speculative hoarding. Also, there can be genuine shortages triggered by weather-related disruptions in which case prices will move up. So, if prices are always monitored, farmers may have no incentive to farm.

With too-frequent stock limits, traders also may have no reason to invest in better storage infrastructure. Also, food processing industries need to maintain large stocks to run their operations smoothly. Stock limits curtail their operations. In such a situation, large scale private investments are unlikely to flow into food processing and cold storage facilities.

The Act, or the government, also seem to be ineffective in controlling rampant profiteering being indulged in by numerous companies in the name of "organic" or unprocessed foodstuffs. For example, it is unbelievable but true that unprocessed rice (a.k.a. brown rice) bears a price that is two to three times the price of milled or polished rice, though the trading companies make extra profit by selling the bran resulting from milling as well at a hefty price.

One also finds that foods labeled as 'organic' are sold at astronomical prices in most parts of the country, though in a few places like Pune these are available at prices that even the poor are able to afford. Unfortunately, despite such clear evidence of profiteering by companies at the cost of customers, the government seems either unwilling or unable to stop such malpractices under the Act.

References

Essential Commodities Act Wikipedia