CEBU CITY -- Senator Imee Marcos filed Senate resolution Monday, March 4 to investigate the National Food Authority (NFA) on the "highly suspicious" PhP93.75-million sale of 75,000 bags of rice stock to two traders as countless consumers clamored for cheaper rice saying that NFA has completely lost its way amid a cutback in the global rice supply.
"The Philippines is now the world's largest rice importer and the dire market situation today will only worsen in the coming months, citing El NiƱo weather disturbances and rice-exporting countries prioritizing their domestic needs," Marcos warned.
According to Imee, the NFA was also at the forefront of buying rice from India. “Bakit sila nauwi duon eh bawal na bawal sa charter nila na sila ang mag-import.” (Why did they end up there when their charter strictly prohibits them from importation?)
The senator recalled that her late father, former President Ferdinand Edralin Marcos, established the NFA in 1972 to buy palay from local farmers, stabilize rice prices for the Filipino consumer, and ensure a sufficient buffer stock for calamities.
However, the agency has repeatedly fallen short of its required buffer stock and been unable to cope with higher farmgate prices of palay, which rose to as high as 27 pesos per kilo last year.
Although palay's farmgate price has dipped to 23 pesos, the NFA had earlier pegged its capacity to subsidize local farmers at only 17 to 19 pesos per kilo. Marcos said the NFA has been unable to support all local farmers desperate for aid, especially when rice smuggling forced them to sell their harvests below the cost of production.
In calling for an investigation, she emphasized
that a thorough review of the NFA's mandate was crucial to deal with a global
rice shortage. (Photos: Google Images)
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