Long-term
solutions needed to fix rice industry
The
Ministry of Agriculture and Rural Development (MARD) has been scrambling as
of late to devise short-term measures to prop up a faltering agriculture
economy and introduce measures to stimulate production and demand.
At a recent conference, MARD
personnel said export prices of agricultural commodities from the beginning
of the year have generally been lower than in 2015, amidst an overall
slowdown in the global economy.
Droughts,
coupled with salt intrusion, have also had and continue to take their toll on
agriculture.
There
was a healthy and important debate at the conference on the wisdom of
agriculture becoming overly dependent on Chinese imports.
Duong
Phuong Thao, deputy director of the Import-Export Department under the
Ministry of Industry and Trade (MIT), said customs figures reveal exports to
China account for up to 30% of total ag related revenue.
China’s
academic and governmental policy structure as to the future direction of
agricultural production is one of self-sufficiency and reduction of imports,
said Mr Thao, noting that Vietnam is currently putting its economic security
at risk by selling too much product to them.
China
is also enhancing its national output through allowing small farmers to rent
their small patches to larger farms, freeing up labour for manufacturing and
adopting new farming technology to boost production.
He
said, the Chinese movement towards self-reliance suggests that the Vietnam
government should tighten its export polices, hold the mark on more exports
to the northern neighbour and find a new pathway forward.
Rice
struggling
Rice
is one of the nation’s major commodities that has experienced a significant
decline not only in exports but global market share throughout the first
seven months of the year leading up to August.
MARD
statistics show that in the first seven months of 2016, the bottom fell out
of the market with rice exports plummeting year-on-year 18% by volume and 14%
by weight to 2.93 million metric tons valued at US$1.32 billion.
Notably,
rice consignments to China, by far the largest purchaser of Vietnamese rice
with a 35% market share, experienced a drop of 23% in volume and 13% in value
for the January-July period.
Significant
declines in overseas shipments were also seen in the Philippines (down 54.3%)
and Malaysian (down 59.2%) markets.
The
number one problem the rice segment faces is quality control, said Huynh The
Nang, president of the Vietnam Food Association. He said more emphasis need
be placed on maintaining a consistent high quality output.
The
nation’s rice farmers are competing against other countries that have
installed new technologies including such things as in-bin rice drying and
storage, factors impacting rice milling yields, and now they are even
utilizing unmanned aerial vehicles (UAV drones) to manage crop cultivation.
Rice
production in Vietnam is commercially outdated and very inefficient, as
farmland is currently divided into small patches making it unsuitable to
fully benefit from modern agricultural equipment with advanced technologies.
What’s
needed is well implemented land reform to pave the way for more modern
agriculture practices along with policies to provide badly needed funds for
the rice segment of the economy to retool.
Only
then will the nation find itself in a position to put in place long-term
solutions and effective controls to ensure a high quality national output of
rice on an economical, timely, consistent and sustainable basis, Mr Nang
concluded.
VOV
|
Thứ Hai, 15 tháng 8, 2016
Đăng ký:
Đăng Nhận xét (Atom)
Không có nhận xét nào:
Đăng nhận xét