Business World

Gov’t moves to implement rice tariff act, projects P7-11B collection

- — Melissa Luz T. Lopez and Charmaine A. Tadalan

RICE IMPORTS starting March 5 will be covered by new tariffs under a newly signed law, with the measure expected to generate at least P7 billion in its first year of implementa­tion.

An inter-agency body led by the National Economic and Developmen­t Authority (NEDA) is drafting the IRR for Republic Act No. 11203, or the Rice Tarifficat­ion Act that was signed by President Rodrigo R. Duterte on Feb. 14.

The measure imposes the following tariffs: 35% for rice imports coming from members of the Associatio­n of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN); 40% for imports within the 350,000 metric-ton minimum access volume (MAV), regardless of country; and 180% for above-MAV imports from non-ASEAN countries.

In a statement, the Department of Finance (DoF) said the government expects to raise P7-P11 billion from tariffs in the first year of the law’s implementa­tion.

State offices involved in drawing up the IRR include the NEDA, Department of Budget and Management and the Department of Agricultur­e.

The DoF also clarified that the new tariff scheme will take effect March 5 — 15 days after the law was published on Monday — and not March 3 as the department had initially reported.

Finance Secretary Carlos G. Dominguez III, however, said that the new tariffs can take effect even without the IRR in place.

“There are parts of the law that are clear up front and can be implemente­d earlier than the parts of the law that require an IRR to implement. The heart of the reform, which tariffies rice importatio­n with the least government interventi­on, will be implemente­d as soon as possible to bring down rice prices for more

than 100 million Filipino rice consumers,” Mr. Dominguez said in a Viber message to reporters.

Other provisions of the law, which include restructur­ing of the National Food Authority (NFA) to take it out of grains trading, will be covered by the IRR.

Mr. Dominguez said the NFA now has a P145-billion debt, mainly due to the agency’s practice of buying palay at a high price and then selling it at a low retail price.

In a separate statement, NEDA Secretary Ernesto M. Pernia said the first draft of the IRR was completed last week and presented at the NFA Council’s meeting last Monday. It will be revised and subjected to public consultati­ons.

NEDA said the current draft carries provisions on NFA’s new mandate and the streamlini­ng of import requiremen­ts. It also spells out details of safety nets for farmers affected by the removal of import limits via the Rice Competitiv­eness Enhancemen­t Fund provided by the law.

While the law gives a 180-day limit for crafting an IRR, Mr. Dominguez said 30 days would be “sufficient to make a plan.”

The DoF expects rice prices to drop by P2-7 per kilogram with the influx of cheap rice. In turn, the central bank estimates a 0.6 percentage point reduction in the headline inflation for 2019.

CONCERNS

One lawmaker on Tuesday cautioned against implementi­ng the law without rules to ensure proper enforcemen­t.

“Hindi na po pala hihintayin ang pagsagawa ng IRR (It seems the government will no longer wait for an IRR before it implements the law)…,” Butil Rep. Cecilia Leonila V. Chavez told reporters in a briefing in the House of Representa­tives, citing the need to make sure hefty annual allocation­s to the Rice Competitiv­eness Enhancemen­t Fund will really be used for farmers’ benefit.

“Nakakalung­kot pong isipin na sa laki ng kailangan na assistance

ng magsasaka ay sinimulan sa P10 billion at in-earmark sa ahensya ng gobyerno na hindi tayo sigurado kung maaaring makapagdow­nload ang mga ahensya na ‘to diretso sa mga magsasaka (It’s sad to think that we cannot be sure if the P10 billion earmarked annually for this fund for the next six years will go to farmers).”

The law provides that the P10 billion will be allocated through attached agencies of the Department of Agricultur­e like the Land Bank of the Philippine­s (LANDBANK), among others.

Half of the allocation will support acquisitio­n of rice farm machinerie­s and equipment through the Philippine Center for Postharves­t Developmen­t and Mechanizat­ion (PhilMech), a third will support rice seed developmen­t, propagatio­n and promotion through the Philippine Rice Research Institute (PhilRice), 10% will be for expanded rice credit assistance through LANDBANK and the Developmen­t Bank of the Philippine­s and the remaining 10% for rice extension services through PhilMech, PhilRice, Agricultur­al Training Institute and the Technical Education and Skills Developmen­t Authority.

OVERSIGHT WATCH

Sought for comment, Finance Assistant Secretary Antonio Joselito G. Lambino II said in a mobile phone message that “the heart of the reform, which tariffies rice importatio­n with the least government interventi­on, will be implemente­d ASAP to bring down rice prices for more than 100 million Filipino rice consumers.”

Speaker Gloria MacapagalA­rroyo told reporters on Tuesday that she will discuss with House of Representa­tives Agricultur­e committee chair Jose T. Panganiban, Jr. of the ANAC-IP partylist how the oversight committee can help in the implementa­tion of the law.

“I will ask his ideas but I think it will be good because it’s an important bill and now we’ll make sure it’s implemente­d,” Ms. Arroyo said.

“So I supposed the implementa­tion details and what to do will depend on Chairman Panganiban. I’ll talk to him because I want to see him. He’s going to chair an oversight on free irrigation sometime next week. So when he does that, I’ll ask him about it.”

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