It also said that there is no evidence to support the contention that "futures trading is responsible for inflation".
While the commodity futures market has made progress, there is no proposal to change the current way of conducting commodity futures trading on the exchanges platform, Minister of State for Finance Jayant Sinha said in Parliament.
"FMC, set up in 1953, regulates forward and futures trading in commodities. There is no proposal for setting of any other regulatory authority for regulating future/forward trading under the consideration of the government," he said.
Asked about the extent to which futures trading is responsible for inflation, Sinha said: "There is no evidence to support the contention that futures/forward trading is responsible for inflation."
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He said several studies such as Abhijit Sen Committee Report (2008) and the Annual Report of RBI (2009-10) have concluded that futures trading is not responsible for inflation.
An independent study, conducted in 2012, has reported that during the period from 1995-96 to December 2012, three factors -- fiscal deficit, global food inflation and domestic farm wages -- explain the price rise (inflation) in the food articles index in India, he added.
The commodity futures market is a mechanism for price discovery and price risk management. It merely discovers the likely prices of a given commodity at futures points of time depending on the expectations of supply and demand, he added.
Asked if the government proposes to change the present system of business through the forward trading, Sinha said: "No Sir. Forward trading has been conducted in the past on the platform of the regional exchanges and regulated under the provisions of the FCRA."
As a result, the commodity futures market has made progress in terms trading volumes, robustness of clearing and settlement, bouquets of products available for trading and governance of exchanges, he said.
However a report submitted by a committee in April to the Finance Ministry has "observed that futures market is fairing relatively well on price discovery and relatively poor on hedging effectiveness".