Manila Bulletin

Rice prices must be kept steady

-

AMID reports of rising prices of consumer goods, rising fuel costs, moves to increase water rates, proposals to raise light rail transit fares, and a record low peso value of 153 to the US dollar, one bright item for consumers stood out in this week’s reports – a drop in the price of rice, the national staple.

Rice imported by the National Food Authority arrived last week and was unloaded at Subic Port. Another shipment arrived at the Cebu Internatio­nal Port for distributi­on in Central Visayas. Other shipments arrived at the Surigao port for Mindanao. With the impending availabili­ty of the imported stocks, NFA rice prices are expected to drop to

127 to 132 per kilo. This in turn should cause the prices of commercial rice stocks to fall to 136 to 138 per kilo. Rice is one commodity whose price the government cannot allow to rise beyond the capacity of the country’s poorest sectors. This is why, despite the Department of Agricultur­e’s assurances that the country’s farmers can now provide most of what the nation needs, we continue to purchase hundreds of thousands of tons of cheap rice from Vietnam and Thailand.

When NFA stocks fell some weeks ago, with cavans of rice down to a few levels on the bodega floors, the prices of all kinds of rice started rising in the country’s markets. President Duterte immediatel­y ordered new importatio­ns. These are the ones which have now arrived in Subic, Cebu, and Surigao. Photos of rice cavans rising all the way to the ceiling have appeared in the country’s newspapers and the reassuring sight has eased the nation’s fears of shortage and sent prices down.

The cheap imported rice, with 15 to 25 percent broken grains, assure the poorer families that they will continue to have an adequate supply for their needs. Most of the nation will be consuming the rice produced by our own farmers.

This local production has been steadily on the rise over the years, with the increasing use of highyieldi­ng varieties, the increasing areas now having free irrigation, rising farm mechanizat­ion, and the rising number of famers’ cooperativ­es and other associatio­ns benefiting from the economies of scale.

Secretary of Agricultur­e Emmanuel Piñol has said the Philippine­s should reach the goal of selfsuffic­iency by 2020 under a program that includes over a million hectares of hybrid rice, installmen­t of small irrigation systems, the use of solar power for irrigation nationwide, and added financing for farmers.

President Duterte says that anytime rice prices rise too much for the poorer folk, they must be brought down with rice importatio­ns, such as what was done these last few weeks. But the ultimate goal remains – that one day we will not need to import from Vietnam or Thailand because our own farmers will be producing enough for our people’s needs.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Philippines