Philippine Daily Inquirer

It’s the safeguard, sir

- ERNESTO M. ORDOÑEZ INQ The author is Agriwatch chair, former secretary of presidenti­al programs and projects, and former undersecre­tary of the Daand the DTI. Contact is agriwatch_phil@yahoo.com.

Not wishing to use former US President Clinton’s presidenti­al campaign statement, “It’s the economy, stupid,” an equally frustrated farmer leader said the solution to our rice crisis is: “It’s the safeguard, sir!” When President Duterte heard about the farmers suffering from the low prices due to the 35-percent price tariff, he publicly said twice that he would stop rice importatio­n. His advisers said this was wrong. The President then backtracke­d, and the farmers continued to suffer.

The President should have been told that a temporary safeguard duty would have lessened the adverse impact on the farmers’ incomeof subsidized imported rice. This safeguard used by many countries could have given farmers a chance to compete in a level playing field. This safeguard is recommende­d by our own law (Republic Act No. 8800) and the World Trade Organizati­on.

I am familiar with this measure. For disclosure, I helped get the cement safeguard as former president of both Cement Manufactur­ers’ Associatio­n of the Philippine­s and Asean Federation of Cement Manufactur­ers. Getting the rice safeguard is far easier than getting the cement safeguard, especially since rice impacts our farmers adversely.

As early as Aug. 13, 2019, Alyansa Agrikultur­a (AA) filed a formal request asking the Department of Agricultur­e (DA) to institute a rice safeguard. THEDA then called for inputs for a study on this. Consequent­ly, AA and Federation of Free Farmers (FFF) submitted documented evidence to support their safeguard petition. But on Oct. 19, the DA prematurel­y terminated this study. It since refused to give AA, FFF, and other interested parties even the interim study results.

The rice safeguard means adding to the 35-percent rice tariff a duty of between 35 percent and 50 percent, resulting in an effective tariff rate of 70 percent to 85 percent. This will equalize the prices of imported and domestic products. This practice is used by other countries to motivate local producers to compete more effectivel­y against imports. This tariff should be decreased within a given time frame to allow the producers to adjust, or face extinction.

This chance was not given to our rice farmers. Consider the table above:

From the 2018 farm-gate price of dry palay of P20.36 per kilo, the 35-percent tariff forced rice farmers to drop their prices to compete with the cheaper subsidized imports. Their net incomes fell from P31,760 to P12,040 per hectare. Today, palay prices have increased slightly, but their incomes are still very low at P16,280.

Worse, for the majority of our rice farmers who sell wet palay as they don’t have access to drying facilities, their palay is sold at P3.16 less than dry palay. At the same production cost of P12.45 a kilo but with amuchlower selling price, their income is only P3,640 a hectare. This is way below the monthly poverty threshold of P10,481 for a family of five.

Was rice tarifficat­ion a mistake? No, because tarifficat­ion stopped the practice of the government unilateral­ly deciding the price, quantity and timing of imports, which resulted in massive government losses from bad judgment and corruption. The private sector is more capable of doing this function. But the government must provide the correct tariff structure to ensure a level playing field. By not implementi­ng a safeguard, more than 3 million tons of rice imports significan­tly exceeded the 1.3-million ton rice supply gap. This resulted in the farmers’ disastrous income losses.

Internatio­nal trade experts said the correct tariff is one that equalizes the price of the landed import and that of the domestic product. For rice, it is between 70 percent and 85 percent, depending on the import source.

As we celebrate World Food Day today, our rice farmers who provide us our main food staple continue to suffer. The services provided by the rice tarifficat­ion law should have been given before the 35-percent tariff was implemente­d, not after. Government must now provide the necessary adjusted effective tariff level that will challenge our farmers to become more productive, but give a limited time and the necessary support services for this adjustment. The answer to this crisis is not a ban on or opposing tarifficat­ion. As the farmer leader said: “It’s the safeguard, sir.”

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