Shri Chirag Paswan
South Asia stands at a critical turning point in its food systems journey. Despite being a significant agricultural region with rich agro-biodiversity, too much value is still lost between the farm and the consumer – a missed opportunity for farmers, jobs and nutrition.
India reflects this paradox. According to the FAO, it is the world’s largest producer of milk and pulses, and the second-largest producer of fruits and vegetables. Yet significant food losses persist due to gaps in post-harvest handling, storage, logistics, and processing, undermining progress toward global development priorities, including the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs). This is not just inefficiency — it is a missed opportunity. Every tonne of food lost represents lost income for farmers, lost jobs for young people, and lost nutrition for families. Turning this loss into value must now become a regional priority.
Food processing is key to unlocking value-added agriculture. It connects farms to markets, farmers to firms, and local production to regional and global value chains — serving as a bridge between agriculture and broader economic transformation.
Moving from Volume to Value
For decades, agricultural policy has rightly focused on increasing production and ensuring food security. That agenda has delivered food security gains. But the next phase must focus on value creation – generating jobs, raising farmer incomes and improving nutrition outcomes. In India, only about 17 percent of agricultural output is processed. This must rise significantly to around 25 percent by 2030 to unlock the full economic potential of the sector. At the same time, reducing post-harvest losses and strengthening processing linkages will be critical to ensuring that more value is retained within the economy. Processing extends shelf life, improves food safety, and opens access to new domestic and export markets. More importantly, it increases the share of economic value that remains within producing countries — benefiting farmers, enterprises, and rural communities.
Shaping Market Led Value Chains
Achieving this transformation will require coordinated investment across the value chain – from production and aggregation to processing, logistics, and market access. A more integrated approach will be essential to meet evolving consumer demands for quality, safety, traceability, and cost-effectiveness.
South Asia’s rich agro-biodiversity offers significant potential for higher-value products, particularly as global demand shifts toward more diverse, nutritious, and specialty foods. At the same time, digital solutions can play a critical role in strengthening traceability, improving quality standards, and enhancing competitiveness in increasingly complex global markets.
Public investment has an important role to play, but it must catalyze greater private sector participation. Strengthening the business environment, reducing risk, and enabling effective public-private collaboration will be essential to unlocking the scale of investment required.
India has already taken important steps through flagship programs such as the Pradhan Mantri Kisan Sampada Yojana, the Pradhan Mantri Formalization of Micro Food Processing Enterprises Scheme, and the Production Linked Incentive Scheme for Food Processing Industries. These initiatives are strengthening infrastructure, expanding cold chains, and supporting small and medium enterprises — laying the groundwork for a more dynamic and competitive sector.
Jobs Where They Are Needed Most
Food processing is not only about economic efficiency – it is about livelihoods.
Across South Asia, millions of young people enter the workforce each year, even as agriculture alone can no longer absorb this growing labor force. Food processing offers a powerful solution.
By creating industries closer to production centers, it generates decentralized employment across logistics, packaging, food technology, and related services. It also creates pathways for entrepreneurship, enabling micro and small enterprises to grow, formalize, and integrate into modern value chains.
This is where the sector’s true promise lies: not just in adding value to food, but in creating meaningful jobs at scale — particularly in rural areas and for women and youth.
Competing in a Changing Global Market
India’s processed food exports have grown steadily, reflecting its expanding role in global markets. As new trade agreements create market opportunities, the focus must now shift from exporting raw commodities to exporting high-value processed products.
Global consumers are increasingly seeking food that is safe, nutritious, traceable, and sustainably produced. This places a premium on quality, standards, and innovation — areas where India is steadily strengthening its capabilities.
To fully capture these opportunities, further investments in technology, quality infrastructure, traceability systems, and branding will be critical. Building globally competitive value chains will enable producers and enterprises to move up the value ladder and enhance their presence in international markets.
Sustainability at the Core
Transforming food systems must also be sustainable and resilient.
Reducing food loss is one of the most effective ways to lower pressure on land, water, and energy resources. At the same time, innovations in waste valorization — converting agricultural by-products into new products — are creating new economic opportunities while reducing environmental impact.
A sustainable food processing ecosystem delivers value across all dimensions: supporting better nutrition outcomes, reducing environmental footprints, and increasing incomes and job opportunities across the value chain.
An Opportunity for South Asia’s Leadership
What makes this moment unique is that it is not just about one country – it is about a region moving together.
South Asian countries face shared challenges: fragmented supply chains, limited processing capacity, and high post-harvest losses. But these shared constraints also create opportunities for shared solutions.
Regional platforms like South Asian Policy Leadership for Improved Nutrition and Growth (SAPLING) are helping to catalyze this shift – creating space for collaboration, knowledge exchange, and investment that no single country can achieve alone. The Unlocking Value dialogue is a direct expression of that commitment: bringing together policymakers, innovators, industry leaders, and development partners from across the region to forge the connections, share the knowledge, and build the partnerships that translate into better jobs and more resilient food systems for all.
India, as a leader in both production and policy innovation, has a critical role to play in shaping this regional transformation.
Placing Policies to Action
The choice before us is clear.
We can continue to lose value along the supply chain or we can build modern, integrated value chains that generate and capture value at every stage.
We can remain exporters of raw produce or become leaders in high-value, sustainable food products
The pathway runs through food processing.
From farms to firms, and from local markets to global value chains, the transformation of food systems will define the region’s economic future. With the right mix of policy, investment and partnership, South Asia can move from food loss to food leadership.
In this spirit, the Ministry of Food Processing Industries looks forward to hosting the next SAPLING High-Level Policy Dialogue bringing together governments, businesses, and development partners, including the World Bank Group, to advance solutions that create jobs, unlock investment, and build resilient food systems across South Asia.
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(The author is Union Minister for Food Processing Industries.)
