The Onion and Tomato Test
In the United States, the price of gasoline is often seen as a public mood ring—a single number that tells you how people feel about the economy and their government. In India, that role is played by a handful of humble vegetables, most notably onions
and tomatoes. These aren't just ingredients; they are the bedrock of countless regional cuisines and the foundation of daily meals for hundreds of millions of people. When their prices soar, as they have periodically in recent years, it’s not an inconvenience. It’s a crisis that dominates headlines, sparks protests, and can threaten the stability of governments. This year is no exception. Erratic monsoons, supply chain disruptions, and storage issues have sent the prices of key staples on a rollercoaster. A kilogram of tomatoes that might normally cost 30 rupees could suddenly shoot up to 150 or even 200 rupees—a five- or six-fold increase. For a nation where a significant portion of the population lives on a tight budget, that kind of volatility isn't just a topic for morning news; it directly impacts a family's ability to eat. And for a government, its inability to control the price of onions is seen as a fundamental failure of competence.
A Social Contract Written in Food Prices
To understand why this is such a big deal, you have to look back. For older generations of Indians—the parents and grandparents of today’s millennials and Gen Z—life was defined by a different economic reality. Before India’s landmark economic liberalization in 1991, the country operated under a controlled, socialist-inspired system. It was an era of scarcity, long waits for basic goods like a telephone or a scooter, and a deep-seated anxiety about the availability of essentials. Out of this experience grew an unwritten social contract: the government’s primary duty was to ensure the stability and affordability of basic foodstuffs. An entire political ecosystem was built around this promise. State-run distribution systems, minimum support prices for farmers, and import/export controls were all designed to keep the price of dal (lentils), rice, and, yes, onions, in check. This history is seared into the national memory. More than one state or even national election has been lost on the back of an “onion crisis.” For anyone who grew up before the 2000s, high food prices are a political signal of the highest order.
Prosperity's Blind Spot
Younger Indians, however, grew up in a profoundly different world. Born after the 1991 reforms, their India has been one of explosive growth, rising consumerism, and global integration. They came of age with shopping malls, international brands, and the internet. Their professional lives are marked by IT jobs, startup culture, and the gig economy, with food delivery apps like Zomato and Swiggy making dining out—or in—an everyday convenience. This generation’s lived experience is one of abundance, not scarcity. Their economic anxieties are more likely to revolve around career growth, urban real estate, or lifestyle inflation rather than the price of vegetables at the local market. For many, the recent food price shocks are their first real encounter with the raw, agricultural heartbeat that still dictates life for much of the country. It’s a jarring introduction to the fact that for all of India's tech prowess and modern gloss, its economy remains deeply vulnerable to the whims of the weather and the complexities of its farm-to-market logistics.
A Kitchen Table Crash Course
This generational gap in understanding is more than just a curiosity. It signifies a critical tension within modern India. The sticker shock that a young programmer feels is a crash course in their own country’s history and structural challenges. They are learning in real-time about the farmer protests that have rocked the nation, the profound impact of climate change on monsoon patterns, and the political dynamite contained in a grocery bill. Ultimately, the issue forces a connection between two Indias that often seem to operate in separate universes: the digital, urban, and globally-connected India, and the rural, agrarian India that still employs nearly half the population. As this younger, more urbanized generation becomes a more dominant force in politics and society, their understanding of this fundamental economic reality will be crucial. It’s a reminder that even in a world of fintech and space missions, the fate of the nation can still be tied to the price of a tomato.
















