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Photographer: Dhiraj Singh/Bloomberg Photographer: Dhiraj Singh/Bloomberg

India’s rampant onion prices may finally be running out of steam, with fresh supplies of the pungent vegetable set to hit the market next month.

Prices at one of India’s biggest wholesale markets may plunge to about 20-25 rupees per kilogram from mid-January, according to Jaydatta Sitaram Holkar, a director at Agricultural Produce Market Committee, a state-run wholesale market for farm commodities at Lasalgaon in Maharashtra. That’s more than 80% below Tuesday’s record price.

Workers sort onions at a wholesale market in Lasalgaon, Maharshtra. Photographer: Dhiraj Singh/Bloomberg

A new onion crop should help ease what has been a catastrophic year for the vegetable in the world’s second-most populous nation. Soaring prices have been blamed for accelerating food inflation and even triggering onion thefts and fist fights, according to some reports.

Eye-Watering Onions The onion affliction continues to haunt India Source: Agricultural Produce Market Committee, Lasalgaon, Maharashtra

The key ingredient for Indian curries and chutneys is so ubiquitous that economists are keeping a close eye on prices for signs of when the central bank may cut rates.

The country usually produces more onions than it needs. But this year, heavy rains and flooding damaged stockpiles as well as the monsoon crop in the main growing areas, according to Siraj Hussain, a visiting senior fellow at the Indian Council for Research on International Economic Relations in New Delhi.

“The government should provide grants to farmers to create modern storage facilities” to cut losses, said Hussain. An estimated 30% to 40% of winter onions get lost in storage every year, he said.

Read more: The Great Onion Crisis in India Is Back to the Dismay of Modi

The government sought to control prices by banning exports, restricting hoarding and increasing imports, yet the rally continued with shipments from overseas not due to arrive until Dec. 27.

Prices surged to a record 111 rupees per kilogram on Dec. 17, according to Narendra Savaliram Wadhavane, a secretary at the state-run wholesale market. Average wholesale prices are still about 80 rupees per kilogram, compared with about 15 rupees in June and July.

Hussain, a former agriculture secretary, warned the government’s decision to limit onion stockpiles could hurt farmers when prices come down again as they’ll be forced to sell despite poor profit margins. Prices are historically volatile, sinking as low as 0.5 to 1 rupee per kilogram toward the end of 2018.

— With assistance by Atul Prakash, and Subramaniam Sharma

( Updates to add onion storage losses in sixth paragraph )