Farmers Urge Govt to Solve Declining Rice Price
Two hundred farmers from Kamphaeng Phet
Province gathered in front of the entrance of the province's
administrative office and submitted their petition to PM Abhisit
Vejjajiva through the provincial governor.
They urged the government to solve
declining rice prices. The provincial security officers were present to
prevent a third hand from using the gathering to stage violence.
The protest leaders took turns
delivering speeches, criticising the government for how ineffective its
price guarantee program has been.
The farmers said they are able to sell
a ton of rice at 5,500 to 6,000 baht, while the standard price
announced by the government is 10,000 baht per ton and the reference
price is at 9,997 baht per ton.
They revealed that after selling the
rice they receive only three baht in subsidy per ton of rice they sell,
while the middlemen, their only other option, offer to buy their
produce at even lower prices.
Provincial authorities assured the farmers that their plight will be forwarded to the government immediately.
In Pichit Province, Thai Rice Mills
Association Deputy Chairman Banjong Tangjitwattanakul said rice millers
in seven northern provinces including Pichit, Phisanulok, Utaradit,
Sukhothai, Kamphaeng Phet, Phetchabun, and Nakhon Sawan held a meeting
to find a solution to the dropping rice price.
Eight to ten rice mills in each
province have agreed to act as agents to buy rice from the farmers at
reference prices, in order to stabilise the price of rice and prevent
it from declining further.
Banjong attributed the declining rice price to premature price cuts by the rice exporters.
He proposed that the government adjust
the reference price for rice more frequently, in order to stay up to
date with the market price.
Currently, the reference price for rice is adjusted once every fifteen days.
Source: Thai Asean News Network