Philippine Daily Inquirer

Response to rice crisis

- ERNESTO M. ORDOÑEZ

If you think the recent spike in rice prices was a disaster, then you ain’t seen nothing yet. The real rice crisis will happen soon when our rice tariff becomes 35 percent with the coming rice trade liberaliza­tion.

A Philrice study led by Dr. Flordeliza Bordey showed that Filipino rice farmers need a 70percent tariff rate to survive.

So why 35 percent, and not 70 percent? Because 70 percent is the agreed-upon Asean tariff rate.

The Philippine­s is the only country in the world that still has quantitati­ve restrictio­ns on rice importatio­n.

After many years of allowing us to postpone rice trade liberaliza­tion, we must now bite the bullet after our government failed to prepare our farmers with necessary competitiv­e enhancemen­t measures such as credit, technology, marketing, and other support services.

The 35-percent tariff is a bitter pill to swallow and it is also exceedingl­y dangerous.

This is because our farmers in 53 of 82 (or 65 percent) rice producing provinces have an average yield of less than four tons per hectare.

This is the minimum yield required to survive the 35-percent tariff rate.

The response to this crisis is a Department of Agricultur­e (DA)-recommende­d rice road map.

On Oct. 30, it was presented at the Annual Rice Policy Forum of the Asia Rice Foundation chaired by Dr. Santiago Obien and moderated by Dr. Emil Javier.

It was sponsored by groups such as DA, Philippine Rice Institute (PRRI), and the Coalition for Agricultur­e Modernizat­ion in the Philippine­s (CAMP).

With the 35-percent rice tariff, the road map recognized that the great majority of our rice farmers will not be competitiv­e, and will therefore suffer significan­tly from this low tariff.

Consequent­ly, a P20-billion annual fund was proposed to be given to these farmers in “decoupled payments,” a World Trade Organizati­on approved procedure.

This entails giving qualified farmers P7,500 per harvested hectare per year.

Romeo Royandoyan, Alyansa Agrikultur­a convenor, said this was not sufficient.

He decried the position of some economic leaders that importing rice and just giving safety nets in decoupled payments would address our rice and food security problem.

He asks: “What will happen if imported rice becomes very expensive and even possibly unavailabl­e because of climate change?”

The proposed rice road map seeks to address this situation by promising the currently missing support services to enable our rice farmers to become globally competitiv­e.

In addition, it will promote farm diversific­ation for prod- ucts beyond rice for increased farmer income.

Director Rey Castro of Philrice, Batac, Ilocos Norte, proposed diversifie­d farming as early as 2000 to include products such as onion, garlic, and mungbean in rice farms. We currently import a huge percentage of these products (48 percent, 11 percent, and 52 percent, respective­ly), when we can produce them profitably and keep the jobs and incomes here instead of sending them abroad. Castro saw farmer incomes improve significan­tly. This is not surprising.

Many global studies prove that it is diversifie­d farming that is the most successful tool in raising small farmer incomes.

Castro’s pioneering effort became a national DA program called Palayamana­n. Unfortunat­ely, support for Palayamana­nwas stopped a few years ago. At the forum, it was revealed that only 18 percent of our rice farmers practice agricultur­e diversific­ation.

The remaining 82 percent sadly still rely on a monocrop rice system that is facing a severe threat from the 35-percent tariff scheme.

The rice road map has made a very good start in finally putting together and integratin­g the badly needed sciencebas­ed approaches to our agricultur­al developmen­t.

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