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Why is India not importing corn from the U.S.?


What Happened?

  • U.S. Commerce Secretary demanded India import U.S. corn.
  • India has been self-sufficient in maize, producing ~50 MT in 2024–25, with 10–12 MT diverted to ethanol.
  • India imports ~1 MT maize (2024–25), mainly from Myanmar & Ukraine — but not from the U.S.
  • U.S. maize is largely GM-based, which India resists.
  • U.S. push is linked to agribusiness interests and Midwest political stakes (corn belt).

Relevance

  • GS 2(International Relations): IndiaU.S. relations, WTO, trade diplomacy.
  • GS 3(Agriculture): Agriculture, food security, ethanol blending, energy security.

Contextual Background

  • India’s maize yield: <4 t/ha vs. world avg. 6 t/ha; U.S. yield: ~12 t/ha.
  • Ethanol blending (20% by 2025) creates new maize demand.
  • U.S. agriculture → export-oriented, capital-intensive, seeks overseas markets.
  • WTO rules have curtailed subsidies, forcing U.S. agribusiness to push exports.

Policy Angle

  • Indias GM policy: Only GM cotton approved; GM food crops under moratorium.
  • Ethanol blending policy (E20 target): Part of India’s renewable & energy security strategy.
  • Trade law: Anti-dumping concerns if U.S. maize is imported at 70% of Indian cost.
  • Political economy: Farmers’ protection, rural employment, and electoral stakes (e.g., Bihar maize farmers).

Data & Reports

  • India’s maize output: ~50 MT (2024–25).
  • Imports: ~1 MT (2024–25), 60% Myanmar, rest Ukraine.
  • U.S. maize: ~350 MT annually, 45 MT exported.
  • Ethanol substitution potential: 20% blending can save ~$10B forex annually.

Multi-Dimensional Overview

  • Political:
    • U.S. push tied to Republican corn-belt voters & Iowa primaries.
    • India resists due to farmer distress risks and upcoming state elections.
  • Economic:
    • U.S. maize is cheaper → threat of dumping.
    • India risks harming its domestic ethanol-maize ecosystem.
    • Forex savings from domestic ethanol could be eroded.
  • Social:
    • GM safety concerns (toxicology, food chain risks).
    • Lessons from Mexico: NAFTA imports displaced 1M+ farmers.
  • Environmental:
    • Ethanol programme reduces oil imports and emissions.
    • Importing feedstock dilutes green & self-reliance goals.
  • Technological:
    • U.S. mechanisation vs. India’s labour-intensive agriculture.
    • India’s scope: R&D in higher yield, non-GM maize hybrids.
  • Ethical:
    • Balancing farmer livelihoods vs. global trade obligations.
    • Corporate agribusiness vs. smallholder protections.

Arguments & Counter-Arguments

  • For imports: Cheaper corn, bridging ethanol demand-supply gap, better yield efficiency.
  • Against imports: Farmer distress, risk of GM contamination, undermining ethanol programme, political backlash.

Conclusion

  • Prioritise self-reliance in ethanol feedstock via better maize yields & diversified crops.
  • Invest in research on non-GM hybrids & biofuels.
  • Use trade diplomacy to resist U.S. pressure while leveraging other areas (tech, services) for negotiation.
  • Safeguard farmer livelihoods & rural employment while balancing climate and energy goals.

Maize (Corn) – Value Addition

Agro-Climatic Requirements

  • Climate: Warm, humid climate; grown in both tropical & subtropical regions.
  • Temperature: 21–27°C (optimum); frost-sensitive.
  • Rainfall: 50–100 cm; drought-sensitive, but also waterlogging intolerant.
  • Soil: Fertile, well-drained alluvial or red loamy soils; pH 5.5–7.5.
  • Season: Kharif (major), also Rabi & Spring (due to short duration hybrids).pasted-image.png

Leading Producers in India

  • Top States (2023–24):
    • Karnataka (~16–17% of national output)
    • Madhya Pradesh
    • Maharashtra
    • Telangana
    • Bihar
  • Together, these five states contribute ~65–70% of India’s maize output.

India’s Global Standing

  • Production (2024 est.): ~35–50 million tonnes (varies by source).
  • Share in world production: ~3% (U.S. ~30%).
  • Rank: 4th–6th globally (after U.S., China, Brazil, Argentina).
  • Yield: ~3.5–4 t/ha (vs. world avg. ~6 t/ha, U.S. ~12 t/ha).

Uses of Maize in India

  • Food grain: Direct consumption (cornmeal, makki roti, snacks).
  • Feed: Poultry, cattle, aquaculture (major share).
  • Industry:
    • Starch, sweeteners (glucose, HFCS), plastics, cosmetics.
    • Alcohol and beverages.
  • Biofuel: Ethanol blending (10–12 MT maize diverted in 2024–25).

Policy & Programmes

  • National Food Security Mission (NFSM) – Maize: productivity enhancement.
  • Ethanol Blending Policy: 20% target by 2025–26 → maize as feedstock.
  • ICAR – Indian Institute of Maize Research (Ludhiana): R&D on hybrids.
  • Price support: MSP for maize in Kharif MSP schedule (2024–25 MSP: ₹2,225/qtl).

Challenges

  • Low productivity compared to global peers.
  • Vulnerability to pests (Fall Armyworm outbreak since 2018).
  • Price volatility due to poultry & ethanol demand.
  • Resistance to GM maize (policy + socio-political concerns).
  • Climate stress: rainfall variability affects yields.

September 2025
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