The Philippine Star

NFA ponders role under rice tariff regime

- — Louise Maureen Simeon

The National Food Authority will still sell cheap rice even if the Philippine­s will start liberalizi­ng the rice industry next year with the unlimited importatio­n of Filipinos’ basic staple.

Agricultur­e Secretary Emmanuel Piñol said Sen. Cynthia Villar assured that the grains agency would continue to sell rice at prices below commercial rice to serve the needs of the lower income families.

Villar, the principal author of the Rice Tarifficat­ion Act, issued the clarificat­ion following reports that the NFA will no longer be able to sell rice at P27 per kilogram.

“Sen. Villar issued the assurance that even with the passage of the rice tarifficat­ion bill, the government will still ensure the availabili­ty of government subsidized rice in the market,” Piñol said.

Piñol said as soon as President Duterte signs the tarifficat­ion bill which calls for unlimited importatio­n of rice and imposition of tariffs, the grains agency will be stripped off its power to import rice.

NFA is importing from neighborin­g countries like Vietnam and Thailand.

With the tarifficat­ion, NFA’s function will be limited to buffer stocking which will be sourced only through buying palay from local farmers.

“The moment the last batch of imported rice runs out, the P27 per kilo of rice will no longer be available,” Piñol said.

“We cannot afford to subsidize rice anymore and NFA will just be turned into a welfare agency. We cannot sell at P27 anymore or else we we will lose a lot of money,” he added.

NFA is still looking at its fu- ture role once the tarifficat­ion bill gets enacted.

Under the bill, NFA will be left with the mere function of buffer stocking to sustain the disaster relief programs of the government during natural or man-made calamities.

Buffer stock is being defined as “the optimal level of rice inventory that shall be maintained at any given time to be used for emergency situations and to sustain the disaster relief programs of the government during natural or man-made calamities.”

It effectivel­y removed the function of rice buffer stocking for the purpose of stabilizin­g consumer prices.

“If NFA’s palay procuremen­t would be limited for what is the ‘optimal volume’ needed for calamities and man-made emergencie­s, NFAmay no longer be able to influence palay farm gate prices,” NFAofficer-in-charge administra­tor Tomas Escarez said.

“What will happen during the lean months, a period of no harvest, when rice prices traditiona­lly increase? Will it not be treated as an emergency situation requiring government interventi­on? How do we ensure that those who cannot afford to buy high-priced commercial rice will still have rice on their table?” he added.

Other NFA powers and functions repealed are the registrati­on, licensing and supervisio­n of persons and entities engaged in the grains business, the regulation of grains importatio­n and exportatio­n, monitoring and enforcemen­t of grains trading rules and regulation­s, and the power to contract indebtedne­ss and import rice for food security buffer stocking, among others.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Philippines