Business World

Rice tariffs decline 23.1% year-to-date

- Beatrice M. Laforga

RICE IMPORT tariffs declined 23.1% year-onyear in the year-to-date period ending Feb. 14, amid a sharp decline in inbound shipments, the Bureau of Customs (BoC) said.

Citing a report from the BoC, the Department of Finance (DoF) said in a statement that import tariff collection­s totaled P1.71 billion, against P2.22 billion a year earlier.

Volumes fell 61.8% year-on-year to 209,320 metric tons (MT).

The Rice Tarifficat­ion Law, or Republic Act No. 11203, was signed in mid-February 2019, and took effect in March. It removed restrictio­ns on rice imports, and instead imposed a 35% tariff on shipments of rice from Southeast Asian trading partners. The tariffs will help fund the modernizat­ion of the rice industry.

In the 2019 period when the law was effective, the government collected P12.3 billion from 2.03 million MT of imports.

Until Feb. 14, 2020, total collection­s have amounted to P14.01 billion since the law took effect.

Finance Secretary Carlos G. Dominguez III said the revenue gives the government “ample means to do even more to make our agricultur­al production more efficient and extend direct aid to small farmers.”

The government must set aside P10 billion a year for five years from the tariffs to support the Rice Competitiv­eness Enhancemen­t Fund (RCEF), which will fund farm mechanizat­ion, agricultur­al credit and training, and inputs such as fertilizer and seed.

The DoF said the law generated billions in fresh revenue in less than one year of implementa­tion, “a complete reversal of its P11billion average annual loss during the pre-RTL regime.” —

 ??  ?? WORKERS at the National Food Authority warehouse in Visayas Ave.
WORKERS at the National Food Authority warehouse in Visayas Ave.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Philippines