Working Paper

Situational Analysis of Pulse Production and Consumption in India

Abstract

This paper discusses the importance of encouraging the production and consumption of pulses, given their nutritional benefits, to achieve the Sustainable Development Goal of reducing hunger and poverty as well as promoting health and nutrition. It gives a situational analysis of the production, consumption and prices of pulses. Further, it describes the various government programmes that have been initiated in India since 2000-01 to increase the production of pulses. This paper undertakes a situational analysis of area, production and yield — state-wise and crop-wise — for 5 major pulses (Bengal gram, red gram, green gram, black gram and lentils), along with that of total pulses, with reference to the time periods in which the various government schemes were launched. It also examines the state-wise growth performance in area, production and yield for these pulses along with an analysis of the share of these pulses in the statistics of total pulses. On the consumption side, the paper analyses the patterns in consumption using the 61st and 68th rounds of the National Sample Survey corresponding to the years 2004-05 and 2011-12. The area and production under pulses has been almost stagnant in the time period starting early 2000. The per capita availability of pulses was less than the recommended dietary allowance (RDA) of 40 g per day even till 2009-10, in spite of imports. Only after 2009-10 is the RDA being met. Though the availability has just reached the minimum level of RDA, the volatility in pulse prices is a major issue that needs to be taken care of. This volatility, which alternates between adversely impacting consumers and producers, creates dilemmas for public policy. This research is supported by the Department for International Development’s by the Leveraging Agriculture for Nutrition in South Asia (LANSA) programme