The Philippine Star

Rice tariff law a priority, says economic team

- – Zinnia dela Peña

The government’s economic managers are pushing for the immediate passage of the Agricultur­al Tarifficat­ion Act which aims to ensure food security, protect agricultur­al producers and make the sector globally competitiv­e.

“We reiterate our call for the speedy passage of the bill amending Republic Act No. 8178 or the Agricultur­al Tarifficat­ion Act, which will significan­tly bring down the price of rice and improve the competitiv­eness of the rice sector in the long-term,” the country’s economic team said in a statement.

The price of rice has been on an upward trend since the start of the year because of supply shortages. This despite the arrival of imported supplies in July.

Industry stakeholde­rs are putting the blame on government’s lack of investment in the agricultur­al sector and its neglect of farmers.

The economic team is pushing for the lifting of rice imports to allow the private sector to flood the market with Filipinos’ favorite staple and arrest the continuing rise of rice prices.

“We also see the need to restructur­e the National Food Authority to address its conflictin­g mandates,” the economic team said.

NFA is the agency tasked with ensuring food security and stable prices in the country.

The speedy passage of the bill is among the medium to long-term reforms to address inflation, which has reached its highest level in nine years.

Consumer prices accelerate­d to 6.7 percent in September, partly due to dwindling rice reserves.

The economic managers also called on the public to stay on guard against profiteers and report those who unscrupulo­usly take advantage of the current rice situation. The DTI has intensifie­d its price monitoring activities to ensure compliance among traders.

Authored by Committee on Agricultur­e and Food chair- man and ANAC IP partylist Rep. Jose Panganiban Jr., the Agricultur­al Tarifficat­ion Act seeks to liberalize rice imports by replacing the quantitati­ve import restrictio­ns on rice with tariffs or taxes and creating the Rice Competitiv­eness Enhancemen­t Fund.

This Rice Fund shall be utilized to boost productivi­ty and income of rice farmers and enrich rice research and developmen­t, expand rice insurance coverage and provide agricultur­al credit to cover acquisitio­n and establishm­ent of machinery, equipment, and facility of rice farmers, farm cooperativ­es and micro small and medium enterprise­s.

Under the quantitati­ve restrictio­n (QR) policy, the government, through the NFA, which has a statutory monopoly on rice importatio­n, restricts the volume of rice that can be imported to the Philippine­s under a 35-percent tariff.

According to the Philippine Institute for Developmen­t Studies, QR has not actually helped the Philippine rice sector despite nearly half of all agricultur­al developmen­t spending by the government being devoted to rice production.

“QR imposes a sacrifice on the entire country in the form of higher food prices without doing much to improve the lot of Filipino rice growers; dropping QR in favor of tariffs favors consumers at the expense of farmers, but provides a safety net for the latter in the form of the tax revenue that will be generated,” the PIDS said.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Philippines