The Philippine Star

Meat price ceiling stays for another month

- By CATHERINE TALAVERA

The price ceiling on pork and chicken in Metro Manila will be implemente­d for another month as the interventi­on helped tame prices, the chief of the Department of Agricultur­e (DA) said.

In a statement yesterday,

Agricultur­e Secretary William Dar said the price ceiling would remain until April 8 as prescribed under Executive Order 124. This EO, which took effect on Feb. 8, imposes a 60-day price ceiling in Metro Manila markets to limit the prices of pork shoulder or kasim to P270 per kilo, P300 for pork belly or liempo and P160 for chicken.

“Lifting it will undeniably result in a dramatic rise in prices of pork and chicken, given that the African swine fever (ASF) crisis is still raging and thus continues to impact on local production of hogs nationwide,” Dar said. “That is why we need to augment the current shortfall, estimated at 400,000 metric tons this year, from ASF-free countries.”

As the inflation rate again rose last month to 4.7 percent, Dar said the government must take all necessary measures to check inflationa­ry pressure to protect low-income households, particular­ly the poor, who are hurt most because high inflation further fritters away the value of their already small income.

Meanwhile, Dar rejected the suggestion of hog raisers to raise the price ceiling, adding that it would be a redundant measure given that the actual average pork and chicken prices are higher than the ceiling imposed by EO 124.

The Pork Producers Federation of the Philippine­s (ProPork) earlier urged the government to raise the price ceiling of pork to around P330 to P360 per kilo as it will encourage hog raisers to resume production.

Also, economists from the University of the Philippine­s-Los Baños had urged the government to remove the price ceiling on pork, emphasizin­g that it will not address supply and cost issues in Metro Manila.

Dar said although the price ceiling may not ensure full compliance by traders and retailers, it is still an effective deterrent against unscrupulo­us trading activities.

Preliminar­y market monitors on Monday showed that the prices of kasim ranged between P300 to P340 a kilo, while liempo was priced at P340 to P360 a kilo.

Laban Konsyumer Inc. president Vic Dimagiba said the interventi­on is working to bring down prices below the anomalous P400 to P450 per kilo seen in the months of December 2020 and January 2021, although not the prescribed amount in the EO.

“The consumers, especially the bottom 30 percent of the household, either don’t buy or buy less pork, and that is desirable but alarming as the right of the consumers’ access to reasonable prices of basic necessity is slowly eroded by expensive pork products,” Dimagiba told

He shared the same sentiment with Dar on retaining the present price ceiling until the end of the EO.

“We oppose adjusting price ceiling at higher amounts,” Dimagiba said.

He added that the DA should also study to expand price ceiling to include Central Luzon and Calabarzon provinces.

By maintainin­g the price ceiling, Dar said the government sends a strong signal to Filipino consumers, who suffer from lower incomes due to the adverse impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on the economy, that it does care about their welfare.

“Hog producers, wholesaler­s and retailers are no less expected to do their share in helping the country’s economic recovery effort,” he added.

Sought for comment on the implementa­tion of the price ceiling for the month, Propork president Edwin Chen said everyone is the biggest loser, pointing out that some consumers are unable to buy pork due to pork holidays by vendors and traders.

“Every time DA did interventi­on without listening to its stakeholde­rs it will result to more harm than benefit,” Chen claimed.

He emphasized that pork producers are always open to help the government meet challenges facing the industry.

Asked what further interventi­ons the government can do to support the industry after the price ceiling expires next month, Chen said they are hoping that the government does not lower tariffs for pork imports to five percent, as it will do the industry further harm.

“In the past, DA interventi­on flooded the markets with imports,” Chen said, adding that a lot of producers as well as importers were at loss.

Last week, Socioecono­mic Planning Secretary Karl Chua said the National Economic and Developmen­t Authority has submitted to President Duterte the proposal to cut tariff rates on pork imports.

Under the proposal, for in-quota or those within the minimum access volume (MAV), a five percent tariff is proposed for the first three months, which will be increased to 10 percent afterwards.

Current imports under MAV, at 54,000 metric tons, are slapped with a 30 percent

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Philippines