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Indian Dairy Sector

Kartavya Desk Staff

Syllabus: Agriculture Allied Activities

Source: LM

Context: India–U.S. trade talks have stalled as India refuses to open its dairy sector, citing risks to farmer livelihoods and milk self-sufficiency.

About India’s Dairy Sector:

Background:

Operation Flood (1970–1996): Transformed India from a milk-deficient country to the largest milk producer globally, accounting for 26% of world output.

Present Status: Milk production in 2024–25: 248 MMT, consumption: 243 MMT (self-sufficient). 80+ million small farmers, average herd size 3–4 cows, yield per cow 1/8th of US or NZ levels. 70% of marketed milk handled by the unorganised sector, 30% by co-operatives & private dairies.

Milk production in 2024–25: 248 MMT, consumption: 243 MMT (self-sufficient).

80+ million small farmers, average herd size 3–4 cows, yield per cow 1/8th of US or NZ levels.

• 70% of marketed milk handled by the unorganised sector, 30% by co-operatives & private dairies.

Significance of Dairy Sector in India:

Largest Agricultural Contributor: Dairy contributes 31% of India’s agricultural GDP, higher than cereals, pulses, or oilseeds.

Rural Livelihood Backbone: Engages 80 million households, especially women, providing steady cash flow even in drought years.

Nutrition Security: Key source of affordable protein, calcium, and micronutrients for a predominantly vegetarian population.

Socio-Economic Equaliser: Offers income opportunities to landless farmers and marginal communities, helping reduce rural poverty.

Employment Generation: One of the biggest employers in rural India after crop farming, with multiplier effects in transport, retail, and processing sectors.

India’s Resistance to Dairy Sector Liberalisation:

Farmer Protection: Tariff cuts would invite cheap imports, crash procurement prices, and force farmers to exit dairy farming.

Self-Sufficiency Concerns: Dependence on foreign dairy may erode domestic capacity, leading to future shortages and price volatility.

Social Stability: Dairy is a rural shock absorber; sudden market disruption could lead to social unrest and livelihood crisis.

Infant Industry Argument: Indian dairy lacks economies of scale and efficiency; premature liberalisation risks wiping out regional brands.

Political Economy: Co-operatives like Amul, Nandini, Verka are politically sensitive institutions tied to rural vote banks.

Dairy Sector and Global Trade:

Global Surplus: U.S., EU, NZ have rising production but flat domestic demand, making India a lucrative export destination.

Trade Pact Stalemate: Dairy market access is a key sticking point in India–U.S. FTA talks; India continues to retain high tariffs.

Export Growth: India’s dairy exports have doubled in the last 3 years (ghee, butter, milk powder) with Bangladesh & UAE as top buyers.

Competitive Pressure: MNCs like Lactalis, Fonterra, Danone possess surplus capacity & deep pockets to undercut Indian players.

Strategic Importance: Dairy liberalisation may give India leverage in broader trade negotiations but risks rural backlash.

Challenges to India’s Dairy Sector:

Low Productivity: Yield per cow far below global standards, hurting cost competitiveness and export viability.

Feed & Housing Deficit: Paddy-straw diet, unhygienic sheds, heat stress reduce milk output & animal health.

Breeding Gaps: Weak adoption of artificial insemination and lack of sex-sorted semen reduce high-yield progeny pool.

Supply Chain Inefficiency: 70% milk handled by unorganised sector → poor cold chain, high spoilage, low value addition.

Underinvestment: Budget allocation for dairy is only 4% of agri budget, despite its large GDP contribution.

Reform Agenda:

Productivity Enhancement: Promote balanced cattle feed, supplements, and breed selection based on agro-climatic zones. Introduce IVF & sex-sorted semen to produce high-yield female calves and improve fertility of 25% infertile cows.

• Promote balanced cattle feed, supplements, and breed selection based on agro-climatic zones.

• Introduce IVF & sex-sorted semen to produce high-yield female calves and improve fertility of 25% infertile cows.

Infrastructure & Scale: Develop cluster-based dairy parks, chilling units, and mechanised milking systems. Encourage FPO-led aggregation for scale economies.

• Develop cluster-based dairy parks, chilling units, and mechanised milking systems.

• Encourage FPO-led aggregation for scale economies.

Policy & Budgetary Support: Increase dairy sector allocation in line with its 31% agri-GDP share. Promote credit support and insurance for smallholder dairy farmers.

• Increase dairy sector allocation in line with its 31% agri-GDP share.

• Promote credit support and insurance for smallholder dairy farmers.

Value Chain & Exports: Expand processing for cheese, butter, and whey to capture higher margins. Build Indian dairy brands globally, leveraging “A2 milk” and organic dairy.

• Expand processing for cheese, butter, and whey to capture higher margins.

• Build Indian dairy brands globally, leveraging “A2 milk” and organic dairy.

Behavioural Change: Encourage farmers to view dairy as a standalone business, not just supplementary income. Invest in farmer training & extension services to raise awareness.

• Encourage farmers to view dairy as a standalone business, not just supplementary income.

• Invest in farmer training & extension services to raise awareness.

Conclusion:

India’s dairy sector is too critical to be left vulnerable to global price shocks. Protection must go hand-in-hand with deep structural reforms to raise yield, strengthen value chains, and ensure competitiveness. With the right mix of investment, technology, and farmer capacity-building, India can become a global dairy powerhouse while safeguarding rural livelihoods.

AI-assisted content, editorially reviewed by Kartavya Desk Staff.

About Kartavya Desk Staff

Articles in our archive published before our editorial team was expanded. Legacy content is periodically reviewed and updated by our current editors.

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