The article  by Dr P Harsha Bhargavi explores how the cow is deeply embedded in India’s culture, economy and global dairy trade dynamics. It notes that India’s reluctance to open its dairy market to major exports—particularly from the U.S.—is driven not just by economics but by a cultural value placed on indigenous breeds and dairy traditions. (

It highlights that over 80 million households depend on dairy livelihoods in India, making dairy farming more than just an agricultural activity but a social and economic backbone of rural life.  The article further claims that more than 300 marketable by-products from cows (milk, dung, urine, ghee, curd etc) emphasise how the cow economy extends beyond milk alone.

Trade and policy issues also figure prominently: India argues that opening up to subsidised US dairy would harm smallholder farmers who cannot compete with large-scale subsidised agribusinesses, and raise concerns over production methods (e.g., growth-hormones, GM feed) that conflict with Indian norms of purity and food-culture.

Finally, the article stresses the importance of indigenous breeds (often producing A2 milk) and claims these breeds carry unique cultural/medicinal significance—asserting that their milk has richer micronutrient profiles and different casein proteins compared to imported breeds.

Key Implications

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