Business World

Time needed to adjust to rice tarifficat­ion — IRRI

- Reicelene Joy N. Ignacio

TIME is needed to prepare rice farmers for the adjustment to heightened competitio­n to be brought by rice tarifficat­ion, the head of the Internatio­nal Rice Research Institute (IRRI) said.

“Clearly, the liberaliza­tion process exposes long-term the industry to more internatio­nal competitio­n,” IRRI Director General Matthew Morell said on Wednesday during the signing of a memorandum of understand­ing (MoU) with the Department of Agricultur­e (DA) on scientific and technical collaborat­ion in support of enhancing the Philippine rice industry’s competitiv­eness.

“Time is needed to adjust and some of the ability, from our perspectiv­e — the research and developmen­t work at IRRI and PhilRice — does need to be nurtured through enhanced education and training,” Mr. Morell added.

Agricultur­e Secretary Emmanuel F. Piñol said that interventi­ons to support farmers should reach them before the tarifficat­ion starts.

“If the interventi­ons are ready right away and our farmers are given enough time to make use of those interventi­ons to improve their productivi­ty, yes our farmers can compete. But if we immediatel­y implement liberaliza­tion even before the interventi­ons can reach our farmers and even before they can improve their productivi­ty, it would lead to the death of the rice industry,” Mr. Piñol said.

He did not elaborate on the required lead time to prepare farmers for competitio­n.

Among the interventi­ons contemplat­ed under the Rice Competitiv­eness Enhancemen­t Fund (RCEF) are equipment and mechanizat­ion, rice crop financing, and assistance with marketing and training.

“Right now, the farmers are complainin­g even without liberalize­d importatio­n. There is speculatio­n among the traders and they’re not buying palay right now, so the price of palay (unmilled rice) has dropped to P14 to P15 per kilo from a high of P25 last year,” Mr. Piñol said.

“The IRRI is both a source of pride for the Philippine­s and a reason for embarrassm­ent. Why? We take pride in the fact that we host the research institutio­n that has developed the world’s rice industry. But we’re embarrasse­d by the fact that even with the presence of IRRI in our midst and our own PhilRice, we have not yet attained that dream of rice self sufficienc­y. We can’t even produce enough rice for ourselves,” Mr. Piñol said.

Mr. Piñol added he has discussed with banks the possibilit­y of providing more loan support to farmers. According to Mr. Piñol, the banks have insufficie­nt guidance from the government in lending to the agricultur­al industry. —

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Philippines