Sodhi resignation — Milk industry jolted, writes RN Bhaskar
Last week delivered a shock to many in the milk industry. R.S. Sodhi, the senior-most executive of the largest milk cooperative in India accounting for a turnover of Rs. Rs 46,481 crore in 2021-22, stepped from the helm of affairs. He resigned from the post of managing director of the Gujarat cooperative Milk Marketing Federation (GCMMF).
His resignation sent shockwaves through the entire agricultural sector. Many speculate that he was asked to leave because of political reasons.


Currently, more than 17 million milk producers pour their milk in 185,903 dairy cooperative societies across the country. That milk is processed in 222 district cooperatives milk unions and marketed by 28 state marketing federations ensuring a better life for millions. Worryingly, the manner in which Sodhi stepped down is a pointer of things to come.
The Sodhi resignation comes on the hells of five developments which hold out dire portents for India’s largest employer – the agricultural sector but more specifically for the milk sector.
Cow slaughter ban without compensation
The biggest blow to this sector was the central government ban on cow slaughter in May 2017. It is worth noting that Prime Minister Modi did not speak about the need for such a ban all the time when he was the chief minister of Gujarat (for almost 15 years) despite that state being one of the major milk producers. Clearly, political compulsions must have changed when he assumed the post of PM.
There is nothing wrong with a government pushing through a legislation which it believes is core to the sentiments of a nation. But to do this without compensating cattle owners who are affected is patently unfair. Farmers earned around Rs.20,000 or more when they sold the ageing cattlehead to a trader who in turn sent it to those engaged in the business of meat and leather.

While slaughter ban does not apply to buffaloes, frenzied gau rakshaks (cattle protectors) are known to waylay any meat wagon, claiming that the consignment is cow’s meat. The trucks are left in the blazing sun, allowing the meat to go rotten. Forensics take time, and it is ironic that a country which does not have adequate forensic facilities for humans, is now compelled to do forensics on cattle meat. All this, in turn, has prevented the leather and meat businesses from growing well.

Farmer unfriendly moves
Even while India was trying to cope with the cow slaughter ban (which actually ended up becoming a cattle slaughter ban through fear and intimidation), the government even tried to sell away India’s milk interests, by almost allowing New Zealand to sell its milk products into this country. The moves appeared innocuous but had the potential of wiping out India’s gains, thanks to Kurien. Sodhi stoutly protested against such moves. Eventually, faced with a whiplash, the government withdrew from the RCEP. It is possible that the incident had made Sodhi a marked man.

A fourth anti-farmer move was the ban on futures trading. Banning market trading actually prevents farmers from discovering future prices. It adversely affects their ability to plan to move into more remunerative crops.
Politicising cooperatives
A fifth move was making the government play a key role in India’s cooperatives, including milk cooperatives. As The Hindu explains, “After Independence, the framers of the Constitution placed cooperatives in the State list. They came to be considered instruments of socio-economic development and became an essential focus of the initial Five-Year Plans. States made their own laws to regulate cooperatives within their jurisdiction, but in 1984, the Multi-State Co-operative Societies Act (amended in 2002) was enacted by Parliament to consolidate different laws at the central level. Verghese Kurien did not want the government to meddle with cooperatives. That policy is being changed. Sodhi, it appears, was not too happy with it. Nor was he happy with the way a BJP office bearer of one of Gujarat’s milk cooperatives was indirectly given an export subsidy to bail him out with surplus production. Kurien had built his cooperatives without touching government subsidies, or largesse. That too is being modified now. At least one of them even threatened to walk out of the GCMMF but finally chose not to. Government subsidies would bail out this cooperative as well.
Risky times ahead
The danger with subsidies for an industry that has grown without them, is that it fortifies the weak and penalises – even cripples – the efficient. That is not a happy state to be in.
Sodhi’s resignation will undoubtedly further weaken the milk cooperative movement – carefully crafted by Kurien. It could have dire consequences for the entire agricultural sector, because most farmers who have adopted good feeding practices earn a profit (income less all expenses) of at least Rs.100 per cattle per day for 300 days a year. It is the only agricultural commodity which gets the farmer a daily cashflow (sometimes once in ten days). Rice and wheat give them a cashflow once in six months. Vegetables do that once in 30 days. Milk has been a godsend for Indian farmers and Indian nutrition.
Just look at the ICOR (Incremental capital output ratio) table. The biggest bang for the buck comes mostly from agriculture and livestock related sectors. It is the biggest employer. All that is now at risk. Two years ago, the farmer agitation was the result of several policies that had hurt the farmer. Two years ago these columns talked about how there was little in the budget for agriculture.
With Sodhi’s abrupt exit, agriculture has been rendered weaker.
Source : Free Press Journal Jan 13th 2023 by R N Bhaskar The author is consulting editor with FPJ









