Srusti Management Review

A Journal of Management & IT

ISSN NO: 0974-4274(PRINT), ISSN NO: 2582-1148(ONLINE)Listed in Ulrich's Periodicals Directory, INDEXED IN J-GATE E-JOURNAL GATEWAY, EBSCOHOST, PROQUEST, U.S.A. & GOOGLE SCHOLAR A Peer Reviewed and Refereed Journal

Innovative Warehousing

Year 2009
Volume/Issue/Review Month Vol. - 2 | Issue 2 | July – December
Title Innovative Warehousing
Authors Dr. Ranjan Kantha , Prof. BJ Lathi
Broad area Innovative Warehousing
Abstract
Food is one of the basic fundamental
need of human being, in prosperity
periods or in recessionary period,
where its main problem lies in the
self life.
As per Dr. Kirit Parikh, Chairman of
the Working Group on Public
Distribution System and Food
Security, a great deal of the work
had already been done and lot of
work is in progress. It is contended
that the interventions by the
Government were justified in the
time of food shortages and scarcity,
when marketing infrastructure and
institutions were not sufficiently
developed and competitive to
protect interest of producers and
consumers. This study looks at
various dimensions of India’s
foodgrain sector and suggests
changes in Government policy on
food management that is relevant
in the present context.
Description This study gave us a great deal of ideas which could provide direction as to how the security problem for food grain should be addressed. Because, a civilized society, in the 21st century, cannot allow any of its citizens to die of starvation or go hungry
File
Referenceses
A) Books -
ASCI (Administrative Staff College of India)
2001. A Study of the Costs of Acquisition
and Distribution of Food grains by the Food
Corporation of India, Commissioned by the
Ministry of Consumer Affairs, Food & Public
Distribution, and Government of India.
Bansil, P.C. 2003. Demand for food grains
by 2020 AD. In Towards a food secure India:
Issues and policies, ed. S.M. Dev, K.P. Kannan,
and N. Ramachandran. New Delhi: Institute
for Human Development.
Gulati, A. S. Kahkonen and P. Sharma. 2000.
The Food Corporation of India: Successes and
Failures in Indian Food grain Marketing, in S.
Kahkonen and Anthony Lanyi [Edt]:
Institutions, Incentives and Economic
Reforms in India, Sage Publications: New
Delhi.
Gulati, A., and T. Kelly. 1999. Trade
liberalization and Indian agriculture. New
Delhi: Oxford University Press.
Srinivasan and Jha, 2001 Liberalized trade
and domestic price stability.: The case of rice
and wheat in India. Journal of Development
Economics 65(2): 417-441.
Swaminathan, M. 2003. The dangers of
narrow targeting: An assessment of the
Targeted Public Distribution System. In
Towards a food secure India: Issues and
policies, ed. S.M. Dev, K.P. Kannan, and N.
Ramachandran. New Delhi: Institute for
Human Development.
B) Journals and News papers -
Bhalla, G. S. and P. Hazell. 1997. “Food
grains Demand in India to 2020: A
Preliminary Exercise”, Economic and Political
Weekly 32(52): A150-A154.
Cummings Jr., R., S. Rashid, and A. Gulati.
2006. “Grain Price Stabilization Experiences
in Asia: What Have We Learned?”, Food
Policy, 31 (4): 302-312.
Ganesh-Kumar, A., M. Panda and S. Mishra.
2004. Employment Guarantee for Rural
India. Economic and Political Weekly ,
39(51): 5359-61.
C) Reports -
Chand, R. 2002. Government Intervention
in Food grain Markets in the New Context
(Report to the Ministry of Consumers Affairs,
Food and Public Distribution, government of
India), National Centre for Agricultural
Economics and Policy Research.
Chopra. R. N. 1981. Evolution of Food Policy
in India. New Delhi: Macmillan.
CMIE. 2005. ‘Agriculture’. Mumbai. Center
for Monitoring Indian Economy.
2003. Buffer Stock Policy for the 10th Five
Year Plan, Government of India.
Gulati, A. and Kahkonen, S. 1996. “The Food
Corporation of India: Successes and Failures
in Indian Foodgrain Marketing”, NCAER-IRIS
Collaborative Project, November, Mimeo.
MOF (Ministry of Finance, India). 2003.
Economic Survey 2002-03. New Delhi:
Ministry of Finance, Economic Division.