Manila Bulletin

Abolish NFA–Gatchalian

- By MARIO B. CASAYURAN

Pro-administra­tion Senator Sherwin T. Gatchalian and opposition Senator Francis Pangilinan ganged up yesterday on the National Food Authority (NFA) over the current rice shortage saying the reforms put in place during the second Aquino administra­tion has allegedly been “overturned by greed, incompeten­ce and corruption.”

Gatchalian, chairman of the Senate economic affairs committee, said he is pressing for the abolition of the NFA to spare taxpayers the burden of subsidizin­g the "inefficien­t and unproducti­ve" operations of the agency.

“lsa sa mga problema ng nakikita ko kaya kulang ang supply at mataas ang presyo ng bigas ay iyong operations ng NFA. Hindi maayos at hindi nagagampan­an ang responsibi­lidad nito,” Gatchalian said. (The inefficien­t operations of the NFA are caus-

ing the current rice supply shortages and high prices of rice.)

Gatchalian pointed out that the NFA has become "a liability to the government" after its revenue continues to drop every year.

Earlier, Sen. Cynthia A. Villar, chairwoman of the Senate agricultur­e and food committee, tagged the NFA as a “dismal failure.”

Pangilinan, president of the Liberal Party (LP) and former Presidenti­al Assistant on Food Security and Agricultur­al Modernizat­ion during the later part of the Aquino administra­tion, said the rice crisis in Zamboanga city is “a combinatio­n of both corruption and incompeten­ce by top government officials in cahoots with wealthy private players in the rice industry taking advantage of the rising prices to profit handsomely.”

But Agricultur­e Secretary Emmanuel Piñol said rice prices in Zamboaga soared when rice smuggling operations stopped after President Duterte met with Malaysian Prime Minister Mahathir Mohamad to address movements of terror groups.

In his Facebook post Wednesday, Piñolsaid “the rice crisis in Zamboanga city and the island provinces of Basilan, Sulu and Tawitawi is a dire warning of the fate that would befall on the Philippine­s if the economic managers succeed in their proposal to just rely on imported rice and reduce government spending on the country’s rice farming sector.”

“For so many years, these areas called ZAMBASULTA have relied on smuggled rice from Vietnam and Thailand which is brought into the country via Sabah, Malaysia,” Piñol said.

Smuggled rice, Piñol added “was sold in the marker at prices lower than locally produced commercial rice and local officials hardly lifted a finger to stop the illegal activity.”

“There was no serious effort to develop and support the rice industry in their localities for very practical reasons: Good quality smuggled rice was being sold for 129 in the islands and at least 135 in Zamboanga City.”

This situation reportedly prompted rice farmers to abandon their rice fields and shifted to other agricultur­al activities like fishing “because there was no way they could compete with cheaper smuggled rice.”

1150-B loses Citing financial data, Gatchalian said NFA’s revenue shrank 38 percent to 117.93 billion in 2017, from 129.3 billion in 2016. NFA’s losses, on the other hand, swelled to 1150 billion.

The Bureau of Treasury reported that the NFA was the biggest recipient of subsidies provided to government owned and controlled corporatio­ns (GOCCs) in June 2018.

Record shows that the treasury department allocated P5.2 billion of the total P9.72 GOCC subsidy released that month for NFA’s food security program.

Gatchalian said the Commission on Audit (COA) has called out the NFA for using GOCC subsidy funds to settle outstandin­g debts, saying the funds were intended “specifical­ly to stabilize the price and supply of rice and corn.”

"Taxpayers continue to shoulder the losses that NFA despite its consistent failure to fulfill its mandate to stabilize the market price of rice so that every Filipino family will be able to put enough rice on their plates. It's time to abolish this unproducti­ve agency and put taxpayers’ money to better use," he added.

Gatchalian threw his support behind the recommenda­tion of the country’s economic managers to let market forces determine rice prices instead, which he believes will make the country's foremost staple food more affordable for all.

He also called for the passage of his Senate Bill 1839 which aims to replace quantitati­ve restrictio­ns (QRs) on rice with a reasonable tariff to make the country’s rice producing provinces more competitiv­e.

The measure, according to Gatchalian, would also give the President elbow room to adjust tariff rates on imported rice, to regulate rice exports, and to impose special rice safeguards to ensure food security for Filipinos.

DTI should step up

In the light of the rice crisis in Zamboanga, Davao City 1st district Rep. KarloNogra­les and Surigaodel Sur 2nd district Rep. Johnny Pimentel said it is responsibi­lity of the Department of Trade and Industry (DTI) to carry out anti-profiteeri­ng and price monitoring operations in a bid to temper the effects of such problems.

“We have to send a message that profiteeri­ng does not pay. Government must make it clear that if businesses try to illegally pad their profits, they will literally pay for their crimes," said Nograles, chairman of the House Appropriat­ions Committee.

Nograles, who earlier called on the National Food Authority (NFA) to look into the “abnormally high” rice prices in Zamboanga and nearby provinces, said DTI’s provincial offices need to be “extra vigilant” especially since “probinsyan­os’ budgets are hurt the most when the prices of basic goods go beyond their SRPs (suggested retail prices)."

Pimentel, a member of the Appropriat­ions panel, said the DTI headed by Secretary Ramon Lopez should do something to address the Zamboanga rice crisis.

"It's the responsibi­lity of the DTI to always monitor and regulate the prices of our commoditie­s so I think DTI should send some of its officials to Zamboanga to solve the rice crisis that is happening there," Pimentel said.

The situation in Zamboanga is so serious that the City Council was forced to pass a resolution urging the local government to declare a "state of calamity."

Nograles warned that unscrupulo­us businessme­n may attempt to jack up the prices of basic goods and commoditie­s while unfairly blaming the new TRAIN law or adverse weather conditions. (With a report from Ellson Quismorio)

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