Why are apple traders in J&K worried?


Why Are Apple Traders in J&K Worried? — UPSC Study Note


1. At a Glance


2. Why in the News


3. Background & Evolution

Year Event
Pre-2000s Kashmir apple industry grows organically as India's dominant apple-producing region (~75% of national output)
2000s Controlled Atmosphere (CA) cold storage introduced; government offers 50% subsidy to corporates for building CA stores
2022 Kashmir apple rates crash ~30%; growers demand enhanced government support [S3]
July 2024 AFFI demands 100% import duty on apples; industry alarm over liberalisation trajectory [S3]
2025–26 India-US trade deal finalised — BCD on apples cut 50%→25% with MIP ₹80/kg [S1]
2025–26 India-EU FTA concluded — 20% duty under TRQ (50,000T/yr, doubling in 10 years) [S1][S2]

4. Core Static Facts

Apple & Horticulture Sector — J&K - Apple = 50% of total horticulture production in J&K [S1] - J&K horticulture revenue: ~₹10,000 crore/year [S1] - Employment (direct + indirect): ~35 lakh individuals [S1] - J&K's share of India's apple output: ~75% of national production [S3] - Apple's share of J&K GDP: ~8.2% [S3] - Controlled Atmosphere (CA) storage in Valley: ≥80,000 tonnes capacity [S3]

Trade Policy Parameters | Parameter | India-US Deal | India-EU FTA | |---|---|---| | Earlier BCD | 50% (previously 70%) | High (pre-FTA) | | New BCD | 25% | 20% (under TRQ) | | Safeguard | MIP ₹80/kg | TRQ: 50,000T/yr | | Future escalation | — | TRQ → 1,00,000T in 10 years |

Implementing Ministry: Ministry of Commerce & Industry (trade deals); Ministry of Agriculture & Farmers' Welfare (horticulture policy) [S2]

Key Mechanisms: - MIP (Minimum Import Price): A floor price below which imports cannot enter — partial protection against dumping - TRQ (Tariff Rate Quota): Lower duty applies only up to a specified import volume; above-quota imports face higher duty - CA Storage (Controlled Atmosphere): Modified O₂/CO₂ environment extends apple shelf life significantly; critical for price stabilisation


5. Multi-Dimensional Analysis

Economic

Geopolitical / Strategic

Social

Environmental

Legal / Constitutional

Administrative


6. Recent Developments (Last 12–18 Months)


7. Prelims Hooks

  1. Apple production accounts for 50% of total horticulture output in Jammu & Kashmir. [S1]
  2. J&K horticulture sector revenue: approximately ₹10,000 crore per annum. [S1]
  3. Livelihoods supported by J&K horticulture (direct + indirect): ~35 lakh. [S1]
  4. Under the India-US trade deal, BCD on US apples was reduced from 50% to 25% (earlier it had already been cut from 70% to 50%). [S1][S3]
  5. The Minimum Import Price (MIP) set for US apples under the trade deal: ₹80 per kilogram. [S1]
  6. Under the India-EU FTA, apple import duty was reduced to 20% under a Tariff Rate Quota (TRQ) system. [S1]
  7. Initial EU apple TRQ limit: 50,000 tonnes per year, to be doubled to 1,00,000 tonnes over 10 years. [S1]
  8. J&K accounts for approximately 75% of India's total apple production. [S3]
  9. Apple contributes approximately 8.2% to J&K's GDP. [S3]
  10. CA cold storage in Kashmir: at least 80,000 tonnes of apples stored under controlled atmosphere. [S3]
  11. Government subsidy to build Controlled Atmosphere Stores: 50% subsidy given to corporate companies (not farmer cooperatives). [S3]
  12. India-EU FTA negotiations had been ongoing for approximately 18 years before conclusion. [S2]
  13. TRQ (Tariff Rate Quota) mechanism: reduced duty applies only up to a quota volume; above-quota imports attract higher duty.
  14. The PIB FAQ on India-EU FTA clarifies that tariff concessions require Rules of Origin compliance; exporters must submit documentation to Indian customs. [S2]

8. Mains Relevance

GS Papers: GS-III (Primary focus) | GS-II (secondary)

GS-III Syllabus Headings: - Indian Economy — agriculture, food processing, trade - Effects of liberalisation on agriculture - Food security; role of external trade in food economy - Infrastructure: cold storage, post-harvest management

GS-II Syllabus Headings: - Centre-Union Territory relations - Welfare schemes for vulnerable sections; mechanisms for protection

Plausible Mains Questions: 1. "Trade liberalisation in agriculture has historically been a double-edged sword for Indian farmers. Critically analyse the impact of India's recent trade deals on J&K's apple economy and suggest a balanced policy framework." (GS-III, 15 marks) 2. "While India-US and India-EU trade agreements offer macro-economic benefits, they may impose concentrated costs on specific agrarian communities. Examine with reference to J&K horticulture, and evaluate the adequacy of existing safeguard mechanisms like MIP and TRQ." (GS-III, 15 marks) 3. "Post-Article 370 abrogation, Jammu & Kashmir's economic integration with India has deepened, but structural vulnerabilities in its primary sector persist. Discuss with reference to the apple trade crisis of 2025-26." (GS-II/GS-III, 15 marks)


9. Related Topics to Study Next

Topic Why Connected
India-US Trade Deal (BTA) Direct causal trigger; understand the full scope of agricultural concessions
India-EU Free Trade Agreement Second trigger; covers TRQ mechanism and Rules of Origin
WTO Agreement on Agriculture (AoA) Legal framework governing TRQs, tariff bindings, and permissible safeguards
Post-Harvest Infrastructure in India CA storage gaps are a structural vulnerability enabling import competition
Article 370 Abrogation & J&K Reorganisation Contextualises why J&K's economic grievances have a political dimension
Minimum Support Price (MSP) & Procurement Policy Contrast with MIP; understand price support mechanisms in Indian agriculture
National Horticulture Mission / PM-KISAN Government programmes that should theoretically cushion horticulture distress
RCEP & India's Trade Policy India exited RCEP citing agricultural protection; this case tests consistency of that stance

10. Common Errors / Trap Areas

  1. MIP ≠ MSP: The Minimum Import Price (₹80/kg for US apples) is a floor on import prices, not a government procurement price for domestic farmers — do not conflate with MSP.
  2. Duty trajectory error: The duty on US apples went 70% → 50% → 25% (two cuts), not a single reduction from 70% to 25%. Aspirants often cite only the latest number.
  3. TRQ misread: EU apples face 20% duty only up to 50,000 tonnes/year; above-quota imports do not get the concessional rate. Many aspirants state "20% flat duty" — incorrect.
  4. Ministry confusion: Trade deal negotiations are handled by the Ministry of Commerce & Industry (not Ministry of Agriculture). The Agriculture Ministry handles domestic horticulture schemes (National Horticulture Mission, etc.).
  5. J&K's constitutional status: Post-2019, J&K is a Union Territory (not a state) — the elected government's powers are curtailed compared to a full state, making its ability to unilaterally counter Union-negotiated trade terms even more limited.

11. Sources