Rice farmers unhappy despite global top position
Farmer Le Van Giau poses for a picture in his
rice stock in the Mekong Delta province
of An Giang. Photo:
Tuoi Tre
Vietnam is likely to become the
world’s largest rice exporter for the first time this year, but local farmers
are not happily embracing the news as they have gained little profit compared
to last year’s crops.
As of the end of October, Vietnam
is still in the leading position, followed by India
and Thailand,
with local businesses signing contracts to export some 7.6 million tons of
rice, according to figures from the Vietnam Food Administration (VFA).
“Vietnam may export a
total 7.7 million tons of rice by the end of this year, and will thus surpass
India
to become the world’s largest exporter,” said VFA chairman Truong Thanh
Phong.
This is the highest export volume ever recorded in 20 years, and it is a huge
achievement given the reduced rice production and the troubled export market,
he evaluated.
Being in the No.1 place will create a reputation and advantages for Vietnam on
the world market, and help rake in more foreign currency for the country,
commented Doctor Nguyen Van Sanh, head of the Mekong Delta Institute for
Research and Development.
However, rice experts and analysts have a different view on the issue.
Vietnam
has only been successful in increasing export volumes, while export
effectiveness, and most importantly, the income of rice farmers, are not
adequately ensured, they said.
Le Van Giau, a farmer in the Mekong Delta province of An Giang,
said his income from the 1.7-hectare paddy field this year dropped by 20
percent compared to last year’s crop, as prices have fallen.
But he is still luckier than farmers with smaller rice fields, who have had
to take on extra jobs such as fishing or selling fruit to make ends meet.
Low values
The ten-month average export price of Vietnamese rice this year is US$433.7 a
ton, some $50 a ton lower than the same period last year.
Domestic rice prices also slumped against soaring input costs, which have
gradually lowered farmers’ profits from their paddy fields.
The export values from rice shipments this year are lower than in 2011, and
stand far behind those of Thailand
and India
due to the cheap prices, said Nguyen Minh Nhi, former chairman of the An
Giang People’s Committee.
“Therefore, becoming the world’s largest rice exporter doesn’t mean much to
farmers, as most of them are still facing poverty and instable incomes,” he
said.
The VFA, meanwhile, explained that the reduced exporting prices were a global
phenomenon, rather than a case particular to Vietnam.
However Nguyen Dinh Bich, from the Market Research Institute, said there was
another cause -- mistaken predictions on the exporting market conducted by
VFA.
As of September 2011, VFA began to increase rice exporting prices to keep
pace with Thailand,
and managed to export at rates equal to the rival a month later, he
elaborated.
By the end of last year, the price gap between Vietnam
and Thailand
was only $20 a ton, rather than the $40 a ton in the first eight months of
the year.
However, the rice management agencies have forgotten that there was still
another big rival -- India,
which was willing to empty their huge unsold stock at a very competitive
price, he added.
“In the last months of 2011, Indian rice exporting prices were at some points
$100-$119 a ton lower than their Vietnamese counterparts, and it’s
understandable why global customers turned their back on Vietnam and switched
to India,” he concluded.
TuoitreNews
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