The Philippine Star

EO sets zero tariffs to ease food inflation

Food imports to flood market

- By JESS DIAZ and PAOLO ROMERO

High food prices? Flood the market with imports.

President Duterte is expected to issue an executive order (EO) reducing to zero the tariffs on imported fish, corn, vegetables and feed wheat to curb inflation, Albay Rep. Joey Salceda said yesterday.

Socioecono­mic Planning Secretary Ernesto Pernia also revealed at a Senate hearing the impending issuance of an EO on tariff cuts for certain agricultur­al products and the imposition of tariff on rice.

Pernia said a public consultati­on on the issue is set for tomorrow.

Salceda told a news forum that the President would issue the order after Congress goes on an 11-day recess next weekend.

He said the reduction of tariffs on these imported products was among the counter-inflation measures Speaker Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo and other House leaders had agreed upon with the President’s

economic advisers last week.

He revealed imported meat was removed from the list after industry leaders made a “strong lobby” with the Palace.

“It’s not ours. It’s the executive department that doesn’t like it. If they don’t like it, what could we do?” Salceda told the Kapihan sa Manila Bay forum.

Arroyo clarified that she was “not advocating the importatio­n of meat products at reduced tariff rates considerin­g that there are other more substantiv­e drivers of inflation as cited in the PSA (Philippine Statistics Authority) survey.”

Pernia said temporary tariff cuts are being readied for some agricultur­al products like corn, wheat flour, chicken and vegetables.

Inflation represents the increase in the prices of goods and services. According to the PSA report, inflation in July further jumped to 5.7 percent from 5.2 percent in June.

Critics blame rising consumer prices largely on new and higher taxes on diesel, kerosene, cooking gas and bunker fuel for electricit­y generation imposed under the controvers­ial Tax Reform for Accelerati­on and Inclusion (TRAIN) law.

Salceda, who describes himself as Arroyo’s focal person for anti-inflation measures, said the measures agreed with the President’s economic team included deferring “regulated price adjustment­s” for electricit­y, water and even certain oil products, and the importatio­n of 500,000 to 800,000 metric tons of rice.

“What we really need to do is arrest momentum to prevent any speculatio­n… We should bring immediate relief to consumers, especially the poor, to bring inflation back to four percent,” he said.

“Next month, without measures, we see inflation peak at 5.9 percent and this will hover around 5.6 percent till yearend. With vigorous measures, we can see July to be the peak inflation with September falling to 5.6 percent,” Salceda said.

“Mas mabilis pa ang inflation (Inflation is faster). I would say this is possibly the first near crisis of this administra­tion,” he added.

Rep. Michael Romero of party-list 1-Pacman, an economist like Arroyo and Salceda, said the counter-inflation measures proposed by the Speaker are intended to cut inflation by at least 1.8 percent.

“At this point, the specifics must come from the President’s economic managers. The department­s, for example, must send to us the list of fish and other products whose tariffs can be reduced to zero,” he said.

Enough time to ready EO

Senate President Vicente Sotto III said the Senate and the House of Representa­tives will adjourn session from Aug. 16 to 27 to allow Duterte to issue the order.

Sotto said despite the twoweek break, Congress will actually just lose one session day, which is sandwiched between non-working holidays and weekends.

Letting Congress do its task of setting tariffs would take time and require public hearings with affected sectors.

Also, the Senate is still discussing the Rice Tarifficat­ion Bill, which seeks to impose a 35 percent tariff on rice imported from other Southeast Asian countries in lieu of quantitati­ve restrictio­ns.

Senate Minority Leader Franklin Drilon said the adjournmen­t would allow Duterte to set tariffs while Congress is drafting the necessary legislatio­n.

Sen. Cynthia Villar, chair of the committee on agricultur­e and food, said plenary deliberati­ons on the bill may start soon.

Villar said the bill needs to be passed as soon as possible so the country can avoid possible sanctions from the World Trade Organizati­on (WTO), which required the lifting of quantitati­ve restrictio­ns as part of its mandate to liberalize trade.

The country usually imports rice from Thailand and Vietnam.

The Senate will also conduct an inquiry into the failure of certain government agencies to put behind bars suspected rice smugglers despite the enactment of the Anti-Agricultur­al Smuggling law two years ago.

The probe by Villar’s committee was prompted by a resolution filed by Sen. Joseph Victor Ejercito seeking an audit on the implementa­tion of Republic Act 10845 of 2016, which imposes a penalty of life imprisonme­nt and other penalties on any person found guilty of large-scale agricultur­al smuggling.

At a recent Senate hearing, Ejercito noted the prevalence of the use of fake import permits as well as delays in the filing of cases against erring traders. The Bureau of Customs (BOC) was only able to file three cases with the Department of Justice (DOJ).

“Allegedly, the cases are still pending before the DOJ,” Ejercito said.

Only last month, the BOC discovered the unauthoriz­ed release of over a hundred containers from the Mindanao Internatio­nal Container Terminal in Misamis Oriental that may have contained agricultur­al products, he said.

Uniform 5% rate

At a press briefing, Budget Secretary Benjamin Diokno said the Duterte administra­tion is “leaning towards the uniform reduction (of tariffs) to five percent.”

“We want to make it five so it’s simpler, more uniform. A standard rate like five is kind of neutral” and “does not affect the consumptio­n of goods,” Diokno said.

At the Senate, economic managers said the planned tariff cuts would not significan­tly affect revenue collection. They were responding to questions from Sen. Ralph Recto.

Finance Secretary Carlos Dominguez III said duties on chicken and fish alone have reached P1.9 billion.

Pernia told reporters after the hearing that the reduction in tariffs would only be temporary or until inflation normalizes next year.

He said tariff for fish products is at 15 percent; meat, 20 percent; corn, 35 percent; feed wheat, seven percent, and vegetables, 40 percent.

Aside from reducing tariffs, Dominguez said the government wants to reduce the processing time for permits and phytosanit­ary certificat­es and lift some restrictio­ns on meat products.

The finance chief said easing both tariff and non-tariff barriers would help the government temper the increase in consumer goods.

Agricultur­e industry stakeholde­rs, meanwhile, have expressed support for the government’s plan for more importatio­n of basic commoditie­s like pork, fish and chicken.

“We do not have problem with that. Last year we also imported additional pork. For as long as the proper tariff will be implemente­d, we have no problem with that,” Rosendo So, chairman of the Samahang Industriya ng Agrikultur­a (Sinag), said yesterday.

The industry earlier expressed concern over proposals to remove tariff on pork and fish imports as part of measures to ease inflation.

“Reducing tariffs to zero percent will annihilate the agricultur­e sector with the expected dumping of cheaper agri imports,” So said.

A consumer group, for its part, is pushing for a moratorium on price increases on basic goods at least until the end of the first quarter next year.

“In two weeks’ time, we shall enter the ‘ber’ months where pressures on demand and supply of basic necessitie­s and prime commoditie­s can trigger another round of price increases,” Laban Konsyumer Inc. said in a statement.

TRAIN is culprit

Meanwhile, Anakpawis party-list Rep. Ariel Casilao said the new 5.7 percent record inflation in July should leave no doubt that TRAIN law has done more harm than good.

“Inflation had been relatively low in the last three years until the Duterte administra­tion implemente­d its TRAIN law which increased prices overnight and drove inflation higher for seven straight months now,” Casilao said.

He cited a study indicating that “the soaring inflation in the last six months has caused the loss of about P933 to P2,715 in the income of each of some 60 million Filipinos.

“The inflation rate rose to 5.7 percent in July, the highest and fastest in five years. It was mainly pushed by price spikes in fuel, food and transporta­tion, with food prices registerin­g a year-on-year increase at 7.1 percent,” he pointed out.

He accused the Duterte administra­tion of “making it appear that the 5.7 percent inflation in July was triggered more by supply problems, not by its economic policies.” –

 ?? KRIZJOHN ROSALES ?? President Duterte and PNP chief Director General Oscar Albayalde troop the line during the 117th Police Service anniversar­y celebratio­n at Camp Crame yesterday.
KRIZJOHN ROSALES President Duterte and PNP chief Director General Oscar Albayalde troop the line during the 117th Police Service anniversar­y celebratio­n at Camp Crame yesterday.

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