Tariff hikes on onions and potatoes: Farmers protected, poor forgotten

By Dhananath Fernando

Originally appeared on the Morning

Over the last few weeks, while the Government and Opposition sparred over political theatre, ‘crossing the Rubicon’ as they call it, a decision with far more impact on ordinary people went largely unnoticed. The import tariffs on big onions and potatoes were increased to Rs. 50 and Rs. 80 per kilo, respectively.

The Minister claims that earlier the Special Commodity Levy (SCL) was Rs. 10 for big onions and Rs. 60 for potatoes. The justification? Protecting farmers.

Yes, farmers matter. But protecting them at this cost by placing the full burden on consumers is unacceptable. Sri Lanka is still reeling from its economic crisis. According to a LIRNEasia survey, four million people fell into poverty during the crisis, raising the total to seven million.

World Bank data suggests nearly 25% of Sri Lankans now live below the poverty line. The Department of Census and Statistics (DCS) estimates that one needs around Rs. 17,000 per month just to stay above it. In this context, how do we justify a Rs. 80 and Rs. 50 tariff on two of the poorest man’s dry rations?

When ‘protection’ means higher prices

These tariffs are not unique to onions and potatoes. Similar duties apply to many day-to-day essentials. Take onions: the DCS notes that the retail price is about Rs. 140 per kilo. With the revised SCL, the price will likely hit Rs. 170–180. That means nearly one-third of the price is simply a tax disguised as ‘farmer protection.’

Potatoes tell the same story. At Rs. 300 a kilo, the extra Rs. 20 levy pushes the price to Rs. 310–320. Roughly a quarter of the price is tax. Supermarket shelves already show potatoes at Rs. 340 and onions between Rs. 190 and Rs. 230.

So should we not protect farmers? Of course we must. But let’s remember: farmers already receive fertiliser subsidies, seed subsidies, and other support. If further protection is needed, the better way is direct cash support linked to output. That way, the cost does not cascade to millions of poor consumers who have no escape. After all, the number of onion and potato farmers is tiny compared to the number of people who eat them.

A breeding ground for corruption

Tariffs that change overnight also open space for corruption. Anyone with inside information can import just before the revision and pocket huge windfalls after the levy kicks in. With commodities like onions and potatoes, which last more than a month in storage, the temptation is obvious.

We have been here before. Remember the sugar levy hike years ago? That saga exposed how easy it is to game the system with commodities that have long shelf lives. Garlic, rice, and other essentials are also caught in this cycle of discretionary tariff tinkering.

The vicious cycle

High food tariffs ripple through the entire economy. When essentials become expensive, workers from estate labourers to factory staff inevitably demand higher wages. Over time, these wage pressures erode competitiveness and trap the country in a vicious cycle of high costs and low productivity.

Even the International Monetary Fund’s (IMF) Governance Diagnostic has flagged this issue, urging Sri Lanka to remove discretionary powers over tariffs and taxes. Reforms to the Strategic Development Projects Act are meant to address exactly this kind of arbitrary policymaking.

Who really drowns in the Rubicon?

At a time when taxpayers are already stretched thin, paying some of the highest personal taxes in the region and facing steep border taxes on everything from food to vehicles, an SCL of Rs. 80 on potatoes and Rs. 50 on onions is simply unfair. If farmers are to be supported, it should be done directly, with incentives for productivity, not by inflating the grocery bill of every struggling household.

Politicians may talk about crossing the Rubicon. But for the poorest of the poor, the Rubicon is not crossed; it is drowned in. And they drown in it under the weight of a rising cost of living.