What to do about Thailand's Rice Glut | asia sentinel
Samarendu Mohanty, 06 November 2012
The government needs to reduce uncertainty in the global market
The Thai rice mortgage scheme continues to receive a fair amount of
media bashing even after completing its one-year anniversary on Oct. 7.
The debate on its impact on Thailand and the rest of the world continues
to take center stage at a majority of rice conferences in the region.
The media and rice gurus have all ganged up on this scheme because
nobody expected this from Thailand.
This is the country that remained open for business during the 2007 rice
crisis when India and Vietnam banned exports and provided some
stability to a market that was chaotic and getting out of control.
Despite all the negative publicity and criticism, Thai policymakers
remain unruffled and publicly vow to continue with the program.
Questions come to mind: Is this the only country with such a program?
Does it really create so much uncertainty in the global rice market?
To answer the first question, Thailand is not the only country with a
price support program. As a matter of fact, most of the rice-growing
countries in Asia have some form of price support program for farmers.
These have different names and somewhat different operational mechanisms
but all of them are designed to provide a guaranteed floor price for
farmers.
The only difference is that some countries religiously implement these
programs and procure all the rice offered by farmers at the announced
support price whereas others procure only the amount needed for a
strategic reserve. The critical aspect of these programs is the level at
which the support price is set relative to the market price. If the
support price is set much higher than the market price, the government
will end up procuring a large amount of paddy similar to what we have
witnessed in India in the last few years and in Thailand in the past 12
months.
The minimum support price (MSP) for rice in India made a quantum leap
from 2007-08 to 2011-12 by more than 75 percent, whereas it took from
1994 to 2006 for the MSP to increase by a similar proportion. Similarly,
the Thai mortgage scheme was reinstated by the Pheu Thai government at a
price support level that is 30–40 percent higher than the market price.
The end result is that Indian procurement stocks grew by more than
fourfold from 5.5 million tons in October 2007 to 26 million tons in
September 2012. The Thai mortgage stocks in the past two seasons have
gone beyond 10 million tons of rice. In both these countries, domestic
market prices have gone up in response to rising support prices. Despite
the steep rise in the MSP in India in the last few years, the level is
still less than half of the mortgage price in Thailand. In 2011-12, the
Indian MSP for paddy was US$0.20 per kilogram whereas the mortgage price
for paddy in Thailand was $0.48 per kilogram. The combination of a
lower MSP and weaker currency has enabled Indian traders to price broken
and parboiled rice $100-150 per tonne cheaper than their Thai
counterparts and this is taking away market share from Thailand. For the
2011-12 marketing year, Thailand was dethroned from its rank as the top
exporter for the first time in the past three decades and India has
taken over the top spot.
In response to the second question, the mortgage scheme does create more
uncertainty in the global market because of greater government
involvement in the rice business in the sense that the market does not
know when mortgaged rice will be released and at what price.
This scheme was expected to create some problems in the market in the
short run but the unexpected return of India to the non-basmati export
market more than nullified the effects of the Thai mortgage scheme and
even brought the market to its knees. However, over the longer term, the
continuation of the mortgage scheme is likely to make global prices
lower than what they would have been otherwise.
Where do we go from here?
There is no disagreement that this is a populist policy and has
been brought back to appease rural voters. But populist policy is
nothing new and there are numerous examples around the world that do not
make any sense and cost billions of dollars to taxpayers. I personally
believe that the Thai government has every right to support rice farmers
if it wishes to. But the government should be prepared to pay for the
rising cost of the program over time.
There will be year-to-year fluctuation depending on the global rice
production situation. If the global situation is tight, then this scheme
may not cost anything. But, the cost will rise quickly if the global
supply situation improves.
However, as part of its responsibility for global food security,
Thailand needs to take steps to reduce uncertainty in the global market
by announcing a mechanism for the release of mortgaged stocks to the
market in a way that the market knows when and how the stocks will be
released. Another option could be slightly modifying the mortgage scheme
so that farmers have the option of either mortgaging their rice or
receiving the difference between the mortgage and market price and
selling the actual paddy in the open market.
This would enable the government to support farmers, avoid an
accumulation of mortgage stocks, and regain Thailand’s competitive
position in the global market. This is exactly what the US did in the
mid-1980s to continue to provide support to farmers, eliminate
government stockpiling, and become competitive again in the global
market by reforming its price support loan program, which was similar to
the Thai rice mortgage scheme.
The Thai government may also want to think about direct cash transfers
to farmers that are not linked to current production. Japan and South
Korea have recently moved away from price support to direct payments and
the government of India is pondering converting subsidies for food,
petroleum, and fertilizer to direct cash transfers to beneficiaries.
(Samarendu Mohanty is head of the Social Sciences Division at the
International Rice Research Institute in the Philippines. email
s.mohanty@irri.org This is reprinted from his blog.)
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment