The Philippine Star

Senators to NFA chief: Resign

- Paolo Romero, Czeriza Valencia, Alexis Romero

Senators yesterday urged National Food Authority (NFA) chief Jason Aquino to resign over his failure to ensure enough affordable rice for poor families.

Sen. Grace Poe said it was obvious that Aquino failed in his job that led to near-zero buffer stocks of the food staple and caused a spike in prices of commercial rice.

“I hope the President can find a competent replacemen­t. Someone who can do what must be done in the NFA,” Poe told reporters.

The senator declined to speculate on suspicions of some of her colleagues, particular­ly Sen.

Cynthia Villar, chair of the Senate committee on agricultur­e and food, that Aquino may have other motives in announcing the depleting NFA rice stocks.

Sen. Paolo Benigno Aquino IV called for the resignatio­n of Aquino for failing to ensure food security for the Filipinos, especially the poor.

“We are talking about food security for the poorest Filipino families. We need someone who can get the job done,” the senator said.

Sen. Joel Villanueva warned Aquino to quickly shape up as the reported lapses and irregulari­ties in his agency are affecting not only the poor but farmers as well.

“The NFA seriously needs to improve the implementa­tion of its rice procuremen­t policies such as the direct procuremen­t of rice from farmers and cut out the middlemen, and hasten the importatio­n process to replenish the NFA’s buffer stocks and insufficie­ncies,” Villanueva said.

Malacañang yesterday also advised NFA officials to resign if they can no longer perform their roles a day after senators berated them for creating panic over the alleged rice shortage.

Presidenti­al spokesman Harry Roque agreed with senators that the grains agency should not have released false informatio­n about the rice supply.

“We are making an appeal again to the people in government, especially the appointees of President Duterte. We are here to serve the people and if we are having difficulty doing it, perhaps we can consider another career in the private sector,” Roque told radio station dzMM.

Asked if heads will roll because of the issue, Roque said: “That is the decision of the President... If the President learns that a wrongdoing was committed, no matter how close you are to him, you would be fired.”

The National Economic and Developmen­t Authority (NEDA) opposed another increase in the buying prices of palay by the NFA that will aggravate the agency’s debt burden and cause inflationa­ry pressure.

Senator Villar on Tuesday urged the NFA Council to allow the increase in the buying price for palay by P1 to boost stocks.

The NFA currently buys palay for P17 per kilo. In turn, it sells regular-milled rice for P27 per kilo and well-milled rice for P32 per kilo.

But NEDA Undersecre­tary for Planning and Policy Rosemarie Edillon said increasing the support price to P18 per kilo might not even be enough to entice farmers to sell their produce to the NFA since private traders pay more.

“It may still not be effective since most farmers would rather do business with their suki (regular buyer) from whom they can get other favors,” she said yesterday.

Edillon also warned this may aggravate the NFA’s debt burden and would steer it away from its mandate.

She said the NFA does not exist to compete with traders, but only acts as support for farmers when there are no traders buying their produce.

Increasing the support price for palay will also increase the prevailing inflationa­ry pressure since the NFA will also have to increase the selling price of milled rice.

“On inflation, it could jack up prices if NFA insists on competing with the market,” she said.

The NEDA is pushing for the liberaliza­tion of rice trade in the country through the replacemen­t of the quantitati­ve restrictio­n (QR) on rice with tarifficat­ion to drive down inflation. –

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