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Making an attempt to quantify what a common person pays for a ‘thali’ across India, the Economic Survey on Friday, 31 January, said affordability of vegetarian ‘thalis’ improved by 29 percent and that of non-vegetarian by 18 percent between the 2006-07 and 2019-20 period.
As per the survey, a vegetarian thali comprises a serving of cereal, sabzi and dal and the non-vegetarian thali comprises of cereal, sabzi and a non-vegetarian component.
“Both across India and the four regions – north, south, east and west – it is found that the absolute prices of a vegetarian thali have decreased significantly since 2015-16 though the price has increased in 2019,” it said.
Using the annual earnings of an average industrial worker, it is found that affordability of vegetarian thalis improved 29 percent from 2006-07 to 2019-20 while that for non-vegetarian thalis improved by 18 percent, it added.
The survey claimed that 2015-16 could be considered as a year when there was a shift in dynamics of thali prices.
Many reform measures were introduced since 2014-15 to enhance the productivity of the agriculture sector as well as efficiency and effectiveness of agricultural markets for better and more transparent price discovery," the survey said.
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