Manila Bulletin

NEDA certain rice tarifficat­ion will stabilize prices in market

- By CHINO S. LEYCO

The immediate enactment into law of the rice tarifficat­ion bill is fundamenta­l in the government’s efforts to stabilize food prices and overall inflation rate, the National Economic and Developmen­t Authority (NEDA) said.

Reiteratin­g the urgency of the bill’s signing into law, Socioecono­mic Planning Secretary Ernesto M. Pernia said that through rice tarifficat­ion affordable rice can be obtained from various sources and need not be the sole responsibi­lity of the National Food Authority (NFA).

The rice tarifficat­ion bill amends the two-decade-old Republic Act (RA) No. 8178, otherwise known as the Agricultur­al Tarifficat­ion Act of 1996, and replaces the quantitati­ve restrictio­ns (QR) on rice imports with tariff.

The bill, which was ratified by both chambers of Congress on November 28, 2018, is set to be transmitte­d to Malacañan for the President’s signature.

“The aim of the bill is to make rice accessible and affordable to every Filipino, and to make the rice sector competitiv­e,” Pernia said.

Under the new rice importatio­n regime, legitimate rice traders can now import rice sans NFA permits, provided they secure a sanitary and phytosanit­ary import clearance from the Department of Agricultur­e-Bureau of Plant Industry (DA-BPI) and pay the appropriat­e tariff to the Bureau of Customs.

The NFA, on the other hand, will focus on ensuring sufficient buffer stocks to address emergency situations. As there is a need to periodical­ly replenish the buffer stocks, NFA can still sell cheap rice, but to very targeted markets.

“In selling rice, the NFA may opt to focus on far-flung areas, which some private traders may not find profitable to serve,” Pernia said.

Even with rice tarifficat­ion, rice subsidy under the government’s conditiona­l cash transfer program or the Pantawid Pamilyang Pilipino Program would still continue benefiting poor households.

Through the establishm­ent of the Rice Competitiv­eness Enhancemen­t Fund (RCEF) coming from the tariff revenues, the DA, meanwhile, will have an additional source of funding for its programs and projects to increase the productivi­ty and enhance the competitiv­eness of the sector, Pernia noted.

Key interventi­ons to be financed by the RCEF include farm machinery and equipment to improve farm mechanizat­ion, rice seed developmen­t, propagatio­n and promotion, expanded rice credit, crop diversific­ation, and extension services.

A portion of the rice tariff revenues in excess of billion will be used to provide direct financial assistance to rice farmers.

The rice tarifficat­ion bill also provides safety nets to the rice sector as it grants the President emergency power to increase, reduce, or adjust existing tariff rates to safeguard Filipino farmers.

The bill also provides the imposition of a special safeguard duty on rice in case of extreme or sudden price fluctuatio­ns in accordance with RA 8800 or the Safeguard Measures Act.

In the event of possible rice shortage, the bill empowers the President, for a limited period and for a specified volume, to allow importatio­n at lower rates for the benefit of consumers.

Pernia, likewise, urged the DA, along with the Department of Trade and Industry and other concerned agencies, to carry out informatio­n disseminat­ion campaigns on the new rice importatio­n regime and ensure that rice traders are ready to participat­e when the bill is enacted into law.

“Increasing the number of market players and competitio­n in the rice sector are critical for the bill to deliver on its promise of lower rice prices for everyone,” Pernia said.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Philippines