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Qudrat Ullah

Qudrat Ullah

The writer is a Lahore based public policy analyst

Punjab’s food governance reset

Published on: January 5, 2026 2:58 AM

As Chief Minister Punjab Maryam Nawaz Sharif completes her second year in office, her government’s reform agenda has taken clearer shape through a focus on institutional consolidation, improved service delivery, and citizen-centric governance. Among the most significant of these initiatives is the restructuring of the province’s food governance framework, a sector that directly affects household budgets, public health, agricultural livelihoods, and market stability. The reforms underway reflect a broader administrative philosophy aimed at replacing fragmented oversight with integrated, accountable, and technology-enabled regulation.

At the centre of this transformation is the restructuring of the former Price Control and Commodities Management Department into the Food Safety and Consumer Protection Department. This change represents more than a renaming exercise; it signals a fundamental shift in how food regulation, price control, and consumer rights are conceptualised in Punjab. In the past, multiple authorities operated in isolation, leading to overlaps, weak enforcement, and diluted accountability. The incumbent government has sought to address these shortcomings by consolidating key functions under a single department with a clearly defined consumer-centric mandate.

Under the new structure, a wide range of institutions have been brought together, including the Directorate General Food, the Cane Commissioner, the Consumer Protection Council, the Sahulat Bazaars Authority, the Directorate of Enforcement, the Punjab Agriculture Marketing Authority, the Punjab Halal Development Agency, and the Punjab Institute of Agriculture Marketing. This integration allows the government to oversee the entire food supply chain, from agricultural production and procurement to wholesale markets and retail distribution. It also enables more effective coordination, data-driven policymaking, and timely intervention during market disruptions-an approach that aligns with similar reforms introduced in other sectors.

Legal empowerment of consumers has been a central pillar of this governance reset. The Punjab Consumer Protection Act, 2025, has modernised the legal framework by increasing penalties for violations and expanding avenues for complaint redressal. Citizens can now lodge complaints through multiple channels, including mobile applications, online portals, helplines, and deputy commissioners’ offices, significantly lowering barriers to access. Consumer Protection Councils have been activated across districts, extending oversight beyond major urban centres. The decision to replace specialised consumer courts with time-bound adjudication by deputy commissioners reflects an effort to streamline dispute resolution and reduce delays, strengthening public confidence in administrative justice.

Price regulation remains a critical concern when inflationary pressures can quickly erode purchasing power, particularly for low- and middle-income households. To address this, Punjab has deployed a large network of price control magistrates tasked with monitoring the availability, quality, and pricing of essential commodities. Their activities are tracked through digital and geo-tagging mechanisms, introducing real-time oversight and enhancing transparency. Authority over essential commodities has been delegated to line departments based on sectoral expertise, improving administrative efficiency and enabling advanced planning to prevent shortages and price volatility.

Alongside regulatory enforcement, the government has emphasised affordability and access through the expansion of the Sahulat Bazaars programme. With substantial public investment, these bazaars provide essential food items at controlled prices, offering direct relief to households facing rising living costs. The initiative reflects the broader welfare orientation of the CM Maryam Nawaz government, which has prioritised targeted interventions to stabilise consumption and protect the impecunious strata.

Food safety enforcement has been strengthened in parallel with price and market interventions. The Punjab Food Authority continues to play a central role in combating food adulteration, enforcing hygiene standards, licensing food businesses, and conducting inspections and sampling. Investments in modern laboratories, training facilities, and institutional capacity underscore a preventive regulatory approach that links food safety directly to public health outcomes, an area of growing policy emphasis in the province.

Reforms in agricultural markets further illustrate the integrated nature of the Punjab government’s evolving governance model. Digital systems to record weights, prices, deductions, and farmer payments are improving transparency and reducing disputes, particularly in sugarcane procurement. Mobile laboratories, pilot use of body cameras in markets, and upgrades across fruit and vegetable markets are helping curb malpractice and improve price discovery. These measures are closely aligned with the government’s broader rural development and farmer-support agenda, ensuring that market reforms translate into tangible benefits at the grassroots level.

Meanwhile, administrative and financial restructuring has also delivered measurable gains. Improved revenue collection through more efficient market operations, outsourcing of certain services, and faster auctions and allotments has strengthened institutional sustainability. These outcomes reflect a results-oriented governance style that emphasises performance, fiscal discipline, and accountability-key features of the Punjab government’s public-centric approach.

Taken together, Punjab’s food governance reforms represent a significant component of Chief Minister Maryam Nawaz Sharif’s broader reform agenda. By consolidating institutions, modernising legal frameworks, expanding digital oversight, and embedding welfare considerations into market regulation, the province has taken meaningful steps toward building a more transparent, coordinated, and consumer-focused system. While sustained enforcement, institutional capacity-building, and political commitment will be essential to ensure long-term success, the framework now in place marks a decisive shift toward improved consumer welfare, market stability, and public trust in Punjab’s governance architecture.

The writer is a Lahore-based public policy analyst and can be reached at [email protected]

Filed Under: Pakistan Tagged With: food, governance, Maryam Nawaz Sharif, Punjab

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