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Immediate cut in rice prices unlikely, says BMI
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Immediate cut in rice prices unlikely, says BMI

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Filipino consumers will not immediately feel the impact of the government’s move to slash the tariff on imported rice to 15 percent from 35 percent, even if the volume will increase, according to BMI.

The Fitch Group unit said: “the reduction will not have a noticeable impact on domestic prices” as it will take time for the cheaper rice to circulate in the country.

BMI also pointed out that international rice prices are still elevated due to factors such as India’s rice export ban that have tightened the global rice market.

The research firm said the surge in the demand for imported rice might increase the pressure for global prices to go up.

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People line up to buy P29 kilo rice at a Kadiwa center in San Andres, Manila on friday as the Dept. of Agriculture launched a large-scale trial of a program aimed at selling rice for P29 a kilo to vulnerable households in select Kadiwa centers in Metro Manila and Bulacan. INQUIRER/ MARIANNE BERMUDEZ

It cited data from the United Nation’s Food and Agriculture Organization that showed that export quotations for Vietnam’s 25 percent and 5 percent broken rice hit $543 per ton and $568 per ton, respectively, in May this year, up by 18.6 percent and 17.1 percent, respectively, from a year ago.

BMI also mentioned the FAO’s All Rice Price Index, which reached 137.3 points, up by 7.4 percent from 127.8 points recorded last year.


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