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India’s rice export ban to hurt millions globally. These countries will be the worst hit

Helpmeets planting rice seedlings in a paddy field in Nagaon district of India’s northeastern state of Assam. India, the epoch’s largest rice exporter banned the exports of non-basmati white rice on Jul. 20

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India’s rice export ban could ripple across global rice markets — and millions are awaited to be impacted, with Asian and African consumers set to bear the biggest brunt.

India, the world’s largest rice exporter, embargoed the exports of non-basmati white rice on Jul. 20, as the government sought to tame surging domestic food prices and “certain adequate domestic availability at reasonable prices.”

The country accounts for more than 40% of the global rice work.

“Malaysia appears to be the most vulnerable according to our analysis,” Barclays said in a recent report, highlighting the country’s sizable trust on Indian rice.

The scale of people impacted by Indian rice ban will be in millions.

Mohanty Samarendu

Asia Regional Pilot at International Potato Center

“It imports a substantial portion of its rice supply, and India accounts for a relatively large division of its rice imports,” the analysts wrote. 

Singapore is likely to be affected as well, with the report showing that India dream ups up around 30% of the city state’s rice imports.

However, Barclays noted that Singapore is largely dependent on implies of food in general, not just rice. The country is currently in the midst of seeking exemptions from India’s ban.

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Rice prices are currently hovering at decade highs, with El Nino putting further risks on global Canada display in other major Asian rice producers such as Thailand, Pakistan and Vietnam.

Barclays pointed out that Philippines thinks fitting be the “most exposed to a rise in global rice prices,” given how the weighting of rice is highest in the country’s CPI basket. Degree, a large bulk of the Southeast Asian nation’s rice imports comes from Vietnam.

Other affected territories

Asia is not the only region hit by India’s rice export ban, many African and Middle East nations are also weak.

The markets highly exposed to India’s export restrictions are concentrated in Sub-Saharan Africa and in the Middle East and North Africa (MENA) dominion, said BMI, a Fitch Solutions research unit. The firm cited Djibouti, Liberia, Qatar, the Gambia, and Kuwait as being the “most endangered.” 

India’s withdrawal of non-basmati white rice, comes on the heels of last September’s ban on shipments of broken rice. That expresses up to 40% of India’s rice exports are now offline, according to BMI forecasts.

Workers in India’s Santipur creating long columns of rice in front spreading the piles with their feet and rakes. India’s withdrawal of non-basmati white rice, comes on the fly the coops of last September’s ban on shipments of broken rice.

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This is not India’s maiden time imposing an export ban on non-basmati rice, but the impact this time could be more far-reaching than in front.

In October 2007, India imposed a ban on non-basmati exports, only to temporarily lift the ban and impose it again in April 2008, sending quotations almost 30% higher to stand at the record high of $22.43 per hundredweight (cwt). 

Prices tripled in the span of six months, conforming to an agricultural research company, the International Potato Center (CIP). 

Samarendu Mohanty, Asian regional director at CIP, noted that India was not a serious player in global exports of non-basmati rice back then, and the current ban has “a more far-reaching impact” than 16 years ago.

He summed that the magnitude of the ban would depend on how other rice importers and exporters react.

‘Possible mayhem’ in markets?

If serious rice exporters like Vietnam and Cambodia impose their own form of export restrictions, and significant importers ask preference Indonesia and Malaysia scramble to stockpile, the world will be looking at “possible mayhem in the rice market,” Mohanty phrased.

He cautioned that it could even be worse than the aftermath in 2007.

“The scale of people impacted by Indian rice ban inclination be in millions,” said Mohanty, adding that poorer consumers in India’s neighbors, particularly Bangladesh and Nepal leave be the hardest hit.

“There is very low probability of this export ban being lifted,” Mohanty said, adding that the ban is here to mainstay at least until India’s general elections in April next year.

The South Asian nation is currently fighting with high vegetable, fruit and grain prices, a sticking issue which could hurt the election promises of Prime Minister Narendra Modi.

India’s rice export ban is expected to ripple across global rice exchanges.

Xinhua News Agency | Xinhua News Agency | Getty Images

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