Increasing the subsidy the government pays to
farmers is pricing exporters out of global markets
Thailand
may be about to about to lose its pre-eminent position as the world’s biggest
rice exporter because of an ill-advised policy on the part of the incoming Pheu
Thai government in 2011, when it promised to raise the price the government
pays farmers by almost 50 percent.
The
result was that the rice pledging scheme, as it is known, caused farmers to
increase their plantings exponentially – “from fence to fence,” as one
economist said. Rice occupies 55 percent of Thailand's arable land. Nearly 7
million tonnes of rice entered the scheme between October 2011 and February
2012 despite devastating floods that inundated much of central Thailand and
caused significant crop losses.
However,
as forecast in Asia Sentinel in September 2011, the scheme has priced Thai
exporters out of overseas markets. Global prices have remained low, according
to Dr Samarendu Mohanty, an economist with the International Rice Research
Institute in Los Banos, Philippines.
“Everybody
was predicting that the Thai market program would cause lots of problems in the
market,” Mohanty said. “That hasn’t happened because there has been a surplus
of rice in the world market. We have too much rice.” Introduction of the Thai
support scheme caused the price of 25 percent broken rice to spike up to nearly
US$600 per tonne before drifting down this year again.
The
Thai government especially has too much rice. The program was extended from the
end of February to September to cover procurement of the second crop and keep
farmers happy, with the result that the government can be expected to end up
with having to purchase as much as 10 to 12 million tonnes of surplus rice at
least US$100 per tonne over world prices.
“When
everything is said and done, it will become an issue of how long they want to
hold onto it,” Mohanty told Asia Sentinel in a telephone interview. “The
government will become active to dispose of some of it. They have to have some
kind of government-to-government deal to sell at subsidized prices.”
Given
ample current world stocks, it appears that Thailand will face selling at a
loss. India, which is becoming a powerhouse n international rice sales, expects
a normal 2012 monsoon, producing some 30 million tonnes, much of which will be
used to support domestic food subsidy programs that supply 35 kg of rice per
month to some 65 million of the country’s poor families. Given that, “Thailand
will not be able to sell above their market price,” Mohanty said. “It will have
to be subsidized.”
Thailand
has been the biggest rice exporter for nearly five decades, with export volumes
increasing steadily from 1 million tonnes in 1974-75 to more than 10 million in
2010-11. Its share of the global market peaked at 43 percent in 1988-89,
according to IRRI, and has since fluctuated 25 percent and 30 as the global
rice trade has tripled, from 11 to 33 million tonnes in the wake of trade
liberalization and the 1994 General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade (GATT),
which later became the World Trade Organization.
Rice,
traditionally grown in small plots by families raising their own food, has
gradually grown to be a globally traded commodity, with volumes increasing more
than 50 percent in the past decade. Vietnam and India in particular have joined
global exporters, today accounting for nearly a third of the global rice trade.
Despite
losing market share, Thailand has been able to steadily increase its volume of
exports and maintain its status as the largest exporter in the world. The
United States Department of Agriculture (USDA) now projects Thailand’s 2011-12
crop at 20.3 million tonnes of milled rice, more or less matching 2010-2011
production.
India’s
entry into the non-basmati export market, after four years has made matters
worse for Thai exporters. Thai white and parboiled rice prices were nearly
US$200 per tonne than for their Indian counterparts during the initial months
after India's resumption of non-basmati rice exports, according to IRRI.
Although
the price difference has narrowed as Thai prices have declined, it still
remains around US$100 per tonne. Vietnam also lost some market share because
quotations closely follow Thai prices. The USDA now projects Indian rice
exports for 2011-12 to be 6.5 million tons, which is the same as the projected
exports from both Thailand and Vietnam in the same marketing year. This is
nearly 40 percent lower than what Thailand exported in 2010-11: 10.5 million
tons, IRRI said.
“Is
this the end of the dominance of Thailand in the global rice market?” an
article asked in IRRI’s house publication, Rice Today. “The answer to this
question is not a categorical yes or no. It depends on developments on several
fronts.
Thailand
must disband its pledging program to remain on top for the immediate future.
But, the article continued, “Its stay on top may be short-lived if Myanmar and
Cambodia get their act together and modernize their rice sector and reform
their policies. Both of these countries are endowed with fertile lands and a
favorable natural environment that can expand their production and take away
market share from Thailand.”
Myanmar’s
steps to reform its government and open up its economy are especially
meaningful. Prior to the country’s disastrous five-decade experiment with
socialism and self-sufficiency, Burma, as it was then known, was described as
the breadbasket of Asia. If it can get its act together, it could return to
that position.
“Several
government initiatives, which aimed to improve the performance of its rice
sector for the past years have raised hope for Myanmar’s return to the global
rice market sooner,” IRRI notes. “One of these initiatives is the establishment
of the Myanmar Rice Industry Association (MRIA) in 2010 by merging producers,
traders, and millers associations. It aims to speed up the development of the
sector by attracting private investment and raising the sector’s concerns to
the government.
“If
Thailand persists with the program, the emergence of new players in the export
market will surely accelerate,” IRRI said. “The country may be displaced
eventually as the largest exporter in the world. But, in the end, it all
depends on how fast the global rice trade expands. If global rice trade volume
follows the trend of the past two decades, it is possible to have enough
maneuvering space for all exporters, including the new entrants. Hence,
Thailand will continue to hold on to the top position.
John
Berthelsen
Asian
Sentinel
Business & Investment Opportunities
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