ABC news
written by AP staff
Tuesday June 18, 2013
Thailand's government on Tuesday acknowledged losing more than $4.46 billion in one year in a much-criticized scheme to support rice prices that ended up dislodging the country from its spot as the grain's top exporter. The program is likely to be amended to reduce the losses, the commerce minister said.
Prime Minister's Office Minister Warathep Rattanakorn said government sales of rice it purchased from farmers fell far short of the sum it paid to the farmers under the 2011-12 subsidy program, accounting for the loss. The government had been criticized for refusing to disclose the losses and the amount of rice it has been forced to stockpile.
Under the scheme, the government buys rice from farmers at about $490 a ton, hundreds of dollars more than the market price. Its inability to resell much of it on the international market allowed India and Vietnam to surpass Thailand in the value of their rice exports.
The government's National Rice Policy Committee announced plans on Monday to lower the payments to farmers.
Commerce Minister Boonsong Teriyapirom said the Cabinet is expected to approve the planned change and it is likely to take effect June 30.
"The adjustments will show that even though the government is trying to implement several policies that benefit the people, it is also adhering to fiscal discipline," he said.
Prime Minister Yingluck Shinawatra said the government will attempt to reduce its losses by cutting expenses but also strive to maintain farmers' incomes.
Subsidies for rice farmers were launched in 2004 when Yingluck's brother, Thaksin Shinawatra, was prime minister and implemented a host of populist policies. The scheme was criticized then for alleged graft and high costs, and Thaksin was ousted by a military coup in 2006 after protests in the capital against his alleged corruption and abuse of power.
The scheme was revived by Yingluck as a flagship policy in her 2011 election campaign.
She implemented the program in October 2011, with no limits on the amount of rice the government would purchase. So far, the government has bought 35.2 million tons of rice, paying farmers more than $11 billion, while earning $1.9 billion by reselling some, Warathep said.
The project's expenses also include its administration through the government-owned agricultural bank and costs of storing the rice in warehouses, totaling $482 million.
"In terms of accountancy, it might be called losses," Yingluck said. But she said the losses actually meant gains for Thai farmers who have benefited from the scheme.
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Asia news net
written by Petchanet Pratruangkrai and Piyanart Srivalo
Wednesday June 19, 2013
The Yingluck Shinawatra government has given in to heavy public criticism over the huge 130-billion-baht (US$4.22 billion) loss incurred through its controversial rice-pledging scheme, agreeing to reduce the minimal price from 15,000 baht to 12,000 baht per tonne.
Payment for rice will be reduced from the end of this month - June 30 - till the end of the current crop season in late September, Commerce Ministry Boonsong Teriyapirom said yesterday, as chairman of the National Rice Policy Committee.
But the scheme would continue, with the rate readjusted for the next crop, beginning in November, he said. The government intended to keep the scheme going in line with improved fiscal discipline from now till 2017.
Boonsong said the government planned to outlay "100 billion baht each year" from now till then to fund the rice scheme. But he did not specify when asked if the 100 billion baht"was a subsidy or a loss".
The final figure and timeframe for the new lower rate came in the evening after hours of discussions among senior government figures and NRPC members. The decision looks likely to be endorsed by the Cabinet at its meeting next Tuesday so it takes immediate effect.
A crucial joint meeting between the Finance and Commerce ministries on Monday night reached an initial conclusion that the lower rates should vary between 13,500 baht and 12,000 baht - a cut of 10 to 20 per cent respectively, but this was not submitted to Cabinet for consideration earlier yesterday.
Prime Minister Yingluck Shinawatra, who chaired the Cabinet meeting in the morning, was asked about the 15,000 baht payment level being reduced, but did not answer that. She said: "In accounting terms, the scheme might be at a loss, but in reality, the 130-billion-baht difference the government has shouldered is a care given to farmers."
Giving further details of the NRPC conclusion, Boonsong said farmers would be allowed to pledge their output under the scheme at no more than 500,000 baht. Asked if the government would admit that the rice scheme was a failure due to a huge loss amounting to 130 billion baht, Boonsong said it wasn't the government's fault, but changing factors in the world rice market and the global economy.
The 12,000 baht per tonne amount is calculated under criteria set by the Agriculture Ministry which put a "loss-free guarantee" at 8,000 baht per tonne for farmers, while the remaining 4,000 baht was profit.
Boonsong admitted the global rice market did not favour Thailand and the government's scheme, as prices for rice grown in India and Vietnam, now the largest and second largest exporters, have got lower, while the rice in government stockpiles would only contribute to greater supply in the world market.
The Agriculture and the Commerce ministries would work out solutions to compensate farmers with a cut in tariffs or prices of farm machinery, along with other subsidies, he said. "I hope farmers will understand the government and accept the reduction in the minimal price guarantee," the minister said.
In the meeting on Monday night, government representatives said they accepted a finding by a subpanel handling the scheme's accounting that the pledging policy had suffered a loss of 130 billion baht, on condition that this amount was based on only two rice crops. It does not include the latest crop, which could see 21.5 million tonnes of rice husk or seeds costing possibly 40 billion baht.
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