Rice committee to seek urgent price solutions
Rice farmers recently marched to the
ministry to protest against lower rice income. In many provinces, they
are suffering from falling rice prices and have been protesting for the
past month.
They want the government to reinstate the pledging scheme and increase the guaranteed price from Bt10,000 a tonne to Bt12,000.
However, Porntiva said the government
would not put the pledging scheme back in place, because it had
deteriorated the market prices.
"The government may increase
opportunities to purchase rice directly from farmers. It will proceed
with the guaranteed-income measure, because it is the most efficient
way to increase sustainable incomes for farmers, plus it supports
market mechanisms," said Porntiva, adding that if the guaranteed price
were set too high, it would destroy market mechanisms and cause
problems for exporters.
She also said the protests in some
areas were not caused by falling prices, but rather by traders
encouraging the protesters in a bid to pressure the government to
reinstate the pledging scheme. These traders have lost revenue from the
guaranteed-price project.
Traders and rice millers prefer the
pledging scheme because they received revenue from rice polishing and
warehouse rental fees for storing government rice.
The Commerce Ministry said it was able
to purchase only 1,000 tonnes of rice directly from farmers over the
past week. Six million tonnes of paddy rice are expected in the second
crop's harvest season.
In addition, ministry permanent
secretary Yanyong Phuangrach said he had ordered officials to inspect
the quality of the rice entering the government's buying project.
The ministry has reported some traders
have mixed low-quality Vietnamese rice with the Thai rice to obtain a
higher selling price.
Vietnamese rice is quoted at only
US$365 (Bt11,900) per tonne, while Thai rice is trading at $500 a
tonne. Mixing in Vietnamese rice has destroyed the quality of Thai
rice, Yanyong said.
Source The Nation