This .zip file contains graphic files (in .png format) of each chart and graph in the Economic Research Service report "Growth and Equity Effects of Agricultural Marketing Efficiency Gains in India" (ERR-89), published in December 2009. The content and context of these files is as of the publication 
date of the report. After time, the material may not reflect the current ERS program of work, may be outdated, and/or superseded, so please visit the website to obtain the latest information: www.ers.usda.gov.

Any reuse of these images should include attribution to "Economic Research Service/USDA."

The following inventory lists each of the files in this folder.



File name		Description

			Summary chart: Economywide effects of alternative agricultural and food marketing policy scenarios in India
(fig01.png)		Figure 1 - Gross fixed capital formation (GFCF) in India as share of gross domestic product (GDP)
(fig02.png)		Figure 2 - Estimated agricultural marketing margins in India
(fig03.png)		Figure 3 - Composition of Indian household consumption expenditures by household type
(fig04.png)		Figure 4 - Composition of Indian household expenditures on food by household type
(fig05.png)		Figure 5 - Food marketing costs in India as share of total household consumption expenditures by household type
(fig06.png)		Figure 6 - Food marketing costs in India as share of  household food consumption expenditures by household type
(fig07.png)		Figure 7 - Sources of income for Indian households by household type
(fig08.png)		Figure 8 - Indian household consumption, savings, and taxes by household type
(fig09.png)		Figure 9 - Indian household consumption, savings, and taxes by household type
(fig10.png)		Figure 10- Effects on household real consumption of agricultural and food marketing efficiency gains in India by household type
(fig11.png)		Figure 11- Major Indian agricultural input subsidies, 2001
(fig12.png)		Figure 12- Indian applied agricultural import tariffs, 2001
(Figure 13)		Figure 13- Economywide effects of alternative agricultural and food marketing policy scenarios in India
(Figure 14)		Figure 14- Producer price effects of alternative agricultural and food marketing policy scenarios in India
(Figure 15)		Figure 15- Consumer price effects of alternative agricultural and food marketing policy scenarios in India
(Figure 16)		Figure 16- Household real consumption effects of alternative agricultural and food marketing policy scenarios in India