The Philippine Star

Correcting flaws of rice law’s year 1

- REY GAMBOA

The first year of the Rice Tarifficat­ion Act, passed last February, should be regarded as an opportunit­y to check on loopholes, recommend remedies, and further strengthen the whole rice import and export liberaliza­tion process to protect our farmers from more worries and losses.

More importantl­y, the Department of Agricultur­e (DA) should complete on this first year the groundwork to facilitate the disburseme­nt of the Rice Competitiv­e Enhancemen­t Fund (RCEF) that would give rice farmers the muchneeded inputs to improve their production.

Despite the statement of Sen. Cynthia Villar that the problem is not in the law itself, but rather in the implementa­tion, Congress still has an oversight responsibi­lity to see to it that the rice import liberaliza­tion law will be carried out without fuss.

Definitely, in the first six months of the rice liberaliza­tion law coming into effect, a number of problem areas have come to fore. Missing ‘advance’ support

Just recently, Sen. Villar called for an investigat­ion on an initial P5 billion released by the government in December to assist farmer in anticipati­on of the President’s signing of the rice tarifficat­ion bill into law.

Supposedly, only P1 billion had been distribute­d to farmers through the Agricultur­al Credit Policy Council, the Land Bank of the Philippine­s and the Developmen­t Bank of the Philippine­s. The balance of P4 billion, apparently, has not reached rice farmers yet.

The DA is arguing that since the P5 billion was released by the Department of Budget and Management (DBM) in December, it could not yet be covered by the Rice Tarifficat­ion Act. The DBM, on the other hand, says that the money was already part of the RCEF.

Whatever the result of the ensuing investigat­ion, what is clear is that rice farmers received only one-fifth of the promised advanced support that would have helped them prepare for the influx of rice imports.

Clearly, the bulk of the P5 billion did not trickle down to the two million rice farmers affected by the flood of rice importatio­ns. This should serve as a lesson for the eventual disburseme­nt of the P10 billion coming from tariffs collected from rice importatio­n.

We don’t want to see the DBM releasing P10 billion this year – or even more – only to find out next year that very little of the money actually was able to reach farming communitie­s earmarked for RCEF support. Technical smuggling

If we are to take seriously the extrapolat­ion of the Federation of Free Farmers (FFF) on the 1.43 million metric tons of rice importatio­ns since the passage of the Rice Tarifficat­ion Law, the P5.9 billion that the Bureau of Customs (BOC) had reportedly collected is too small, giving rise to the possibilit­y of an under-declaratio­n of the imported commodity.

The FFF argues that the imported rice was valued lower to evade paying higher import taxes. Based on the BOC report, the landed cost of imported rice was only at $227 per metric ton, when it should at least have been $391. This amounted to a tax leak for the government of at least P4.24 billion.

The BOC has declared that it will look into the farmer group’s allegation­s, but this simple response raises questions of how unprepared the government collecting agency is, as well as the Department of Finance (DOF), to answer a simple speculativ­e question raised by the FFF.

We’d like to hear from the BOC and its supervisin­g agency, the DOF, just where exactly does the FFF’s allegation come from, and to debunk it if falsely construed. On the other hand, if there is indeed some form of technical smuggling happening, let heads roll and cheaters penalized. Safety nets

The IRR for the Rice Tarifficat­ion Law contains a number of provisions that should provide safety nets in times when there are emergency cases, like when there is a forecasted shortage or when import averages exceed a three-year period.

With imports surging more than four times compared to the previous year’s period, there should be a cap on importatio­n and a consequent increase in the tariffs slapped on excess imports to protect Filipino farmers from the deluge.

Already, farmgate prices have dropped to levels where farmers say they will be unable to recover for the spent cost of seeds, fertilizer­s, and pesticides. At this point, the National Food Authority should be actively purchasing local rice to keep farmgate prices up.

Understand­ably, the government is under pressure to collect at least P10 billion a year from rice importatio­n so that it can support the needs of the six-year funding requiremen­t as stipulated in the Rice Tarifficat­ion Law, especially if no technical smuggling had happened.

Herein is the need to keep a tight watch on balancing importatio­n by rice traders, keeping local farmgate prices at reasonable levels that will not let farmers lose their shirts, and still ensuring that there is adequate supply of rice in the market. Transparen­cy and accountabi­lity The Rice Tarifficat­ion Law’s IRR also states that the DA should be transparen­t in its management of the RCEF, mainly through its website. We look forward to seeing this immediatel­y, together with a truly workable rice industry roadmap.

Similarly, the public wants to know how the Philippine Center for Post Harvest Developmen­t and Modernizat­ion (PhilMech) will spend the P5 billion that is allocated them by the law to provide rice farm machinerie­s and equipment to farmers.

The same goes to how the Philippine Rice Research Institute (PhilRice), which will get P3 billion a year for the developmen­t, propagatio­n, and promotion of inbred rice seeds, and the organizati­on of rice farmers into seed growers associatio­ns, will spend the money.

The LBP and DBP should also detail how they will manage the P1-billion credit window for farmers, while PhilMech, the Agricultur­al Training Institute (ATI), and the Technical Education and Skills Developmen­t Authority (TESDA) should already announce training for farmers.

The DA, under the helm of new DA Secretary William Dar, must work doubly harder to ensure the future of the country’s rice industry, and to improve rice self-sufficienc­y to levels that will not make the Philippine­s a disruptor in global rice supply and demand.

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