“The government should keep the caps on rice costs as long as these are needed to safeguard consumers against price shocks and counteract potential illegal acts of price manipulation, profiteering and hoarding.”
House Minority Leader and 4Ps Party-list Representative Nonoy Libanan said as he urged the government “to do everything it can to insulate consumers, especially low-income households, from precipitous and excessive increases in rice prices.”
“If necessary, the government should also subsidize rice traders, not just small retailers, in order to keep the price caps sustainable.”
“If necessary, the government should also subsidize rice traders, not just small retailers, in order to keep the price caps sustainable,” Libanan said.
The veteran legislator warned that the upward pressure on global rice costs “could expose rice-consuming countries such as the Philippines to international commodity opportunists out to exploit price swings to make money.”
“We are also worried that foreign state actors might take advantage of the situation and try to artificially affect global markets to undermine rice-importing countries and their governments.”
“In fact, we are also worried that foreign state actors might take advantage of the situation and try to artificially affect global markets to undermine rice-importing countries and their governments,” the seasoned lawmaker warned.
Asian rice prices began creeping up after India, the world’s biggest rice supplier, suddenly banned exports of non-basmati white rice in July to prioritize its own consumption amid harsh weather conditions and dampened harvests.
The ban has since squeezed Asian rice supplies as Thailand and Vietnam, the world’s second and third biggest exporters of the staple grain, struggle to fill the void created by the abrupt loss of shipments from India.
President Ferdinand Marcos Jr. on Aug. 31 imposed a cap on rice prices to suppress further increases that could make the staple food out of reach of poorer households.
Under Executive Order No. 39, the price ceiling for regular milled rice is P41 per kilogram, while the cap for well-milled rice is P45 per kilogram.
Department of Trade and Industry Secretary Alfredo Pascual said that the government intends to review the price cap later this month when local harvests start and more imports arrive.