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Fruit prices soar in Nepal with festivals just around the corner

2019-08-13 elevenmyanmar

Tag: orange fruits pesticide residues

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With the festive season just around the corner, fruit prices have become dearer by up to 113 percent compared to the same period last year.

The records of Kalimati Fruits and Vegetable Market Development Board show fruits like apple, banana, mango, pomegranate, pineapple and sweet orange seeing the biggest price hike. Binod Raj Pandey, general secretary at Fruits Wholesaler Association, attributed the rise in prices to supply delays caused by the quarantine issue and devastating floods last month along with the soaring price of fruits in the international market.

A Cabinet meeting on June 17 had decided not to allow the import of fruits and vegetables without testing for pesticide residues. But just two weeks later, the government decided to rescind the decision. However, the Supreme Court ordered the government to continue testing for chemical inputs in imported farm products.

The move has hit importers’ bottom line as they incurred heavy losses due to their compulsion in testing the imported goods compounded by the unavailability of chemical testing labs at border points. This meant that importers had to send their produce to distant labs just to get customs clearance.

According to Pandey, importers have raised the price of fruits to compensate for their losses. One of the major fruits consumed during the festive season, apple, has jumped to Rs245-370 per kg, up from Rs115 per kg a year before.

Likewise, the price of pomegranate has gone up by 30.77 percent to Rs255 per kg. Last year, the fruit was available at Rs195 per kg. Similarly, banana now costs Rs115 per dozen, a jump of 21.5 percent.

Price of mango has increased by 45 percent, and consumers now have to pay Rs225 per kg. According to the association, imported products account for 90 percent of the turnover, mainly during the festival. According to the current macroeconomic statistics of Nepal Rastra Bank, import of fruits nearly doubled to Rs9.7 billion during mid July-mid June of the previous fiscal year.

Despite the government’s commitment to tackle price hikes and malpractices in the market, consumers continue to be left disappointed year after year. The situation has gotten so bad that even the government authority is helpless to stop it.

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