New Delhi:A price adjustment reserve fund created by Khadi and Village Industries Commission (KVIC) more than three years ago has come to the aid of over 2,700 Khadi institutions and more than 8,000 Khadi outlets spread across the country as KVIC’s centralised processing plants have decided not to increase the price of raw materials supplied to Khadi industries despite a more than 110% rise in cost of raw cotton in the last 16 months.
In 2018, KVIC, which is the Union government’s nodal agency for promotion of Khadi products in India and abroad, had decided to create a Products Price Adjustment Account (PPA), a kind of reserve fund for its five Central Sliver Plants (CSPs), to meet market-driven eventualities. These plants purchase raw cotton from the Cotton Corporation of India and convert them to sliver and roving and supply them to Khadi plants which in turn converts them into yarn and fabric that is used in the production of Khadi apparels and cloth.
This reserve fund was created by transferring just 50 paise from each kilogram of the total sliver or roving sold by KVIC’s five centralized sliver plants. It was created to deal with the fluctuations in the market price.
Steep rise in raw cotton prices
After the outbreak of Covid-19 global pandemic, the textile industry has been grappling with a crisis situation due to supply disruptions and other issues. As a result, the price of raw cotton has gone up from Rs 36,000 per candy to Rs 78,000 per candy in the last 16 months. Each raw cotton candy weighs 365 kilogram and it is used in the production of sliver and roving that is then converted into yarn and fabric.