|
IE Highlights
| ||||||
After oil, rice may witness cartelisation
BANGKOK , May 1: The prime minister of Thailand, Samak Sundaravej, said Wednesday that his government would try to create a cartel of rice-producing countries in partnership with Vietnam, Cambodia, Myanmar and Laos. “We don’t aspire to be like OPEC, but we hope to be just a group of five to help each other in trading rice on the world market,” Samak was quoted as saying in The Nation newspaper.
Governments in Thailand, the world’s largest rice exporter, have for many years toyed with the idea of using their dominant market position to influence the price of rice in the same way that the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) tries to set crude oil prices. The plan appears to be in a nascent stage. “I think it’s time to do it, probably within the term of this administration,” Noppadon Pattama, Thailand’s foreign minister, said Wednesday.
But if successful, a cartel could have far-reaching consequences on the rice market, sustaining prices at their current historic highs and worsening a food crisis that is hurting Asia’s poorest consumers. The price of Thai B-grade rice, a benchmark variety, has nearly tripled in recent months and is now hovering at about $1,000 a tonne.
Maintaining rice prices would please large-scale rice farmers and traders in countries like Thailand and Vietnam, but it would anger places like the Philippines, Singapore and Hong Kong, which rely heavily on imported rice. Plans for the cartel were front-page news in the Philippines on Thursday.
The current ruling coalition in Thailand received the backbone of its support from rural areas, and Samak appears eager to capitalise on the rice price increase. Thai rice farmers now “have an opportunity,” he said in a recent interview. Unlike corn, wheat and other grains that are widely traded globally, only a small number of countries export rice. The largest rice producers, China, India and Indonesia, consume most of their rice crop domestically. Thanks to a vast, fertile delta, which allows farmers to harvest three or four times a year, Thailand exports about 10 million tonne annually, twice as much as Vietnam, the second-largest rice exporter, and three times what the United States exports. Rice prices rose sharply in March and April after many exporting countries, including Brazil, Egypt, India and Vietnam, announced that they were restricting exports to ensure domestic supplies.
We have leaders who can handle the monsoon session better than the monsoon.BJP stirs the Amarnath pot as Azad is told to prove strength by next MondayPanel to govt: Hike salary cut-off for creamy layer to Rs 4.5 lakhIAF Su-30s to fly in US skies with Korean, French warjetsIAF Su-30s to fly in US skies with Korean, French warjets
Orissa attack shows a major upgrade in Naxalite firepowerAs oil prices surge, a village cycles and car-pools the way outIt’s out: US did advise Iraq on oil contractsCan they turn things around?Towards the end game
Your comment[s] on this article
Be the first to comment on this story.