India's eating habits are changing, farms must adapt too

India's food system is undergoing a transition, with urban menus featuring millets, indigenous rice varieties and quinoa. Cereal consumption is declining while spending on fruits, vegetables and processed foods rises. Yet cropping patterns remain focused on rice and wheat, highlighting the need for diversification.

India's food markets are evolving rapidly, outpacing food production. Urban households now spend less than 35 percent of their food budget on cereals, down from over 60 percent three decades ago. Rural areas are on a similar path, albeit with a lag, and spending on processed foods in rural homes has more than tripled in the past two decades. The health and packaged food sector is expanding at over 20 percent annually.

Cropping patterns are still heavily reliant on rice and wheat, which cover nearly 40 percent of India's cropped area. Pulses, oilseeds, fruits and vegetables make up less than 30 percent, with all millets combined at about 13 percent. Subsidies, procurement, minimum support prices and irrigation favor rice and wheat despite shifting demands.

This mismatch carries significant economic costs. Imports meet 60 percent of edible oil needs. Pulse shortages drive up prices and imports, followed by production spikes that crash prices. Millets require up to 60 percent less water than rice and wheat, while pulses fix nitrogen to improve soil health.

Diversification could provide farmers with new income streams and risk mitigation. Programs like PM-POSHAN feed 10-12 crore children daily, signaling demand. Historically, Indian cuisine aligned with climate and seasons; today's diverse, health-conscious palates offer a chance to revive that connection. As chefs Sanjeev Kapoor and agri-food specialist Purvi Mehta note, dietary diversity is an economic, ecological and nutritional imperative.

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White House desk showing edited India-US trade factsheet with removed tariffs on pulses and softened $500B commitment, flags and aides in background.
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White House quietly revises India-US trade deal factsheet

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The White House has made key revisions to the factsheet on the India-US trade deal just hours after its release. These include removing tariffs on certain pulses from the list and changing the $500 billion purchase commitment to an intention. The changes are seen as beneficial for India.

At a national conference in Rajasthan, experts called for fair and inclusive markets to bolster small farmers' security and local food systems. The event highlighted ecological farming and policy needs amid climate challenges. Discussions involved stakeholders from eight states, focusing on resilient value chains.

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A new study published earlier this month in Frontiers in Sustainable Food Systems has uncovered a gap between advocacy and empirical evidence for scaling indigenous farming systems to counter climate change impacts on agriculture. Researchers led by Kamaljit Sangha at Charles Darwin University reviewed 49 articles on practices by Indigenous peoples and local communities, or IPLCs. The findings highlight benefits like soil protection and biodiversity support, but call for more data on productivity and economic value.

In 2025, Indians went beyond chasing weight loss or wellness hacks to renegotiate their relationships with food, medicine and their own bodies.

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Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. and Agriculture Secretary Brooke Rollins have unveiled an updated national dietary pyramid as part of the Make America Healthy Again campaign. The inverted design prioritizes proteins and dairy but draws criticism for environmental impacts and industry ties. Nutrition experts highlight contradictions with established health guidelines on saturated fats.

Researchers from the University of Bonn analyzed the Asian financial crisis's impact on Indonesian children, finding that soaring rice prices led to stunted growth and later obesity risks. The study, based on long-term household data, highlights how families cut nutrient-rich foods during crises. Effects were strongest in urban areas and low-education households.

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A climate impact assessment compiled by Japan's Environment Ministry warns that without urgent action on climate change, the quality and quantity of rice will decline and flooding will increase. The report scientifically analyzes the effects of global warming on daily life and industry, finding that 65 percent of 80 items across seven sectors will be significantly impacted, with 68 percent requiring particularly urgent measures.

 

 

 

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