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.[1][2]

Essential Commodities Act
Parliament of India
CitationAct No. 10 of 1955
Territorial extentThe whole of India
Enacted byParliament of India
Status: In force

The ECA was enacted 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. Additionally, the government can also fix the maximum retail price (MRP) of any packaged product that it declares an “essential commodity”.

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.

Usage

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 the 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.

Instances

For instance, the Union Government on 14 March 2020 brought masks and hand-sanitisers under the act to make sure that these products, key for preventing the spread of COVID-19 infection, are available to people at the right price and in the right quality during the COVID-19 pandemic in India.[3]

Govt has removed Masks & Hand-Sanitisers from Essential Commodity List from 1st of July.

Proposed amendment

In May 2020, the Finance Minister of India suggested that the act will be amended and stock limit will be imposed only under exceptional circumstances such as famine or other calamities. There will no stock limit for processors and supply chain owners based on their capacity and for exporters based on the export demand.[4][5]

It will also end some punitive measures. It will also deregulate agriculture produce such as pulses, onion, potato and cereals, edible oils and oilseeds, with aim of better price realisation for farmers.[5]

Amendment by Ordinance

The Essential Commodities (Amendment) Ordinance 2020 was promulgated on 5 June 2020.[6] The ordinance amends the Essential Commodities Act to allow the Government of India to delist certain commodities as essential, allowing the government to regulate their supply and prices only in cases of war, famine, extraordinary price rises, or natural calamities. The commodities that have been de-regulated are food items, inc including cereals, pulses, potato, onion, edible oilseeds, and oils.[7] These can only be regulated in the extraordinary circumstances previously mentioned, by imposing limits on the amount of stocks of such items that can be held by persons. The Ordinance states that government regulation of stocks will be based on rising prices, and can only be imposed if there is a 100% increase in retail price (in the case of horticultural produce) and 50% increase in retail price (in the case of non-perishable agricultural food items). These restrictions will not apply to stocks of food held for public distribution in India.[8]

gollark: I don't really agree. It is not practical to guess what directly applicable skills will be needed in the future. It should teach general skills like learning independently fast, mathematical modelling, useful writing, languages, and that sort of thing.
gollark: It's actually possible to learn things yourself.
gollark: CVs are maaaybe suitable for teaching since I don't think there's that much to it but you can probably learn faster with good feedback.
gollark: "How to get a job" is very complex, but that just means school would teach it very uselessly and/or vaguely and/or outdatedly.
gollark: Great, but they can probably find documentation on taxes somewhere when they need it, since I don't think it's very complex either.

References

  1. "Ministry of Consumer Affairs of the Government of India. Official Website. Annual Report 2005 - 2006, Chapter IV, 'Essential Commodities Act 1955'". Archived from the original on 5 November 2011. Retrieved 9 May 2012.
  2. "ECA, 1955". Archived from the original on 25 September 2012. Retrieved 10 October 2013.
  3. "Masks, sanitisers put under Essential Commodities Act". @businessline. Retrieved 25 March 2020.
  4. NEWS, OMMCOM. "Centre To Amend Essential Commodities Act; Deregulate Pulses, Onion". ommcomnews.com. Retrieved 19 May 2020.
  5. "Explained | Amendments to Essential Commodities Act". Moneycontrol. Retrieved 19 May 2020.
  6. Ministry of Law and Justice (Legislative Department), Government of India (5 June 2020). "Essential Commodities (Amendment) Ordinance" (PDF). E-Gazette of India. Retrieved 30 July 2020.
  7. "Cabinet amends Essential Commodities Act, approves ordinance to ease barrier-free trade". The Indian Express. 3 June 2020. Retrieved 30 July 2020.
  8. "The Essential Commodities (Amendment) Ordinance, 2020". PRSIndia. 6 June 2020. Retrieved 30 July 2020.

See also

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.