The Philippine Star

Villar eyes P10-B subsidy under rice tarifficat­ion bill

- By CATHERINE TALAVERA

Senate agricultur­e committee chairperso­n Cynthia Villar plans to include a P10 billion government subsidy in the pending rice tarifficat­ion bill in a bid to boost the competitiv­eness of rice farmers.

Villar told reporters the P10-billion budget would help farmers "mechanize and help them produce inbred seeds to bring their income up to make them more competitiv­e."

While the bill seeks to put collected tariffs from the importatio­n of rice in a rice competitiv­eness enhancemen­t fund, which will help provide technical support to farmers to make them more competitiv­e, Villar said the tariff would not be immediatel­y collected.

She emphasized the need to allot the P10 billion upfront to the rice competitiv­eness enchanceme­nt fund to be able to help local farmers immediatel­y.

The proposed P10-billion subsidy is among the conditions the Senate is working on with regard to the rice tarifficat­ion bill, Villar said.

The bill, which amends the Agricultur­al Tarifficat­ion Act of 1996, will pave the way for the replacemen­t of the quantitati­ve restrictio­ns (QR) on rice imports with tariff.

Villar hopes to have the bill passed by the end of the year, but stressed they are still carefully reviewing it.

"We are thinking of how to pass a better law, so give us time because we are thinking of solutions to the problem it will cause. We are studying it carefully,"

National Economic and Developmen­t Authority(NEDA) Undersecre­tary Rosemarie Edillon earlier stressed the urgency of passing the rice tarifficat­ion bill by October before talks with the World Trade Organizati­on(WTO) since it has been almost a year since the WTO's special waiver on rice expired.

“By October, if we still cannot report any substantia­l progress on the action we have taken, then it will be difficult for us. Our trading partners might ask for further concession­s. Worse, we might be sanctioned, but that’s the worst-case scenario,” Edillon said.

The WTO permitted the Philippine­s to impose the QR for more than two decades from 1995 until 2017.

Last February, Philippine officials who attended the WTO's committee on agricultur­e meeting in Geneva assured the organizati­on that the country will have a new rice tarifficat­ion law by June.

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