Thai White Rice 5%   :   570 (FOB BANGKOK USD/MT)    |   Thai White Rice 15%   :   550 (FOB BANGKOK USD/MT)    |   Thai White Rice 25%   :   520 (FOB BANGKOK USD/MT)    |   Thai White Rice 100%   :   445 (FOB BANGKOK USD/MT)    |   Vietnam White Rice 5%   :   560 (FOB HCMC USD/MT)    |   Vietnam White Rice 25%   :   540 (FOB HCMC USD/MT)    |   Vietnam White Rice 5451 5%   :   570 (FOB HCMC USD/MT)    |   Vietnam Fragrant Rice 5%   :   595 (FOB HCMC USD/MT)    |   Vietnam Fragrant Broken 100%   :   500 (FOB HCMC USD/MT)    |   Thai Fragrant Broken 100%   :   530 (FOB BANGKOK USD/MT)    |   Myanmar White Rice 5%   :   580 (FOB YANGON USD/MT)    |   Myanmar White Rice 25%   :   560 (FOB YANGON USD/MT)    |   Myanmar White Rice 100%   :   430 (FOB YANGON USD/MT)    |   India Long Grain White Rice 5%   :   600 (FOB MUNDHRA USD/MT)    |   India Medium Grain White Rice 5%   :   590 (FOB KOLKATA USD/MT)    |   Indian Brown Rice Swarna 5%   :   500 (FOB KOLKATA USD/MT)    |   Thai Parboiled Rice 5%   :   630 (FOB BANGKOK USD/MT)    |   Indian Long Grain Parboiled Rice 5%   :   540 (FOB KOLKATA USD/MT)    |   Indian Medium Grain Parboiled Rice 5%   :   525 (FOB KOLKATA USD/MT)    |   Vietnam Long Grain Parboiled Rice 5%   :   600 (FOB HCMC USD/MT)    |   Indian Basmati Rice 5% (1121 Pure)   :   1300 (FOB MUNDHRA USD/MT)    |   Thai Hommali Rice 5%   :   880 (FOB BANGKOK USD/MT)    |   Cambodia Phka Malis Rice 5%   :   820 (FOB SIHANOUKVILLE USD/MT)    |   Thai Glutinous Rice   :   750 (FOB BANGKOK USD/MT)    |   Vietnam Long AN Glutinous 10%   :   650 (FOB HCMC USD/MT)    |   Vietnam AN Giang Glutinous 10%   :   650 (FOB HCMC USD/MT)    |   Vietnam Japonica 5%   :   650 (FOB HCMC USD/MT)    |   Corn India SPOT   :   305 (FOB NHAVA SHEVA USD/MT)    |   Corn Pakistan SPOT   :   220 (FOB KARACHI USD/MT)    |   Robusta Coffee Vietnam   :   3800 (FOB HCMC USD/MT)    |   Black pepper Vietnam   :   4600 (FOB HCMC USD/MT)    |  
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Rice tariff collections in the Philippines seen falling to P8.1 billion

Aug 07, 2024

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    The Department of Finance (DOF) expects to generate P8.1 billion in rice tariff collections in the second semester, less than half of the projected revenues following the tariff cut on the commodity.

    During the House Committee on Appropriations briefing with the Cabinet-level Development Budget Coordination Committee for the P6.352-trillion National Expenditure Program yesterday, Finance Secretary Ralph Recto said the government would still be able to collect P8.1 billion in rice tariffs from July to December.

    Rice tariff collections seen falling to P8.1 billion

    Workers arrange sacks of National Food Authority (NFA) palay or unmilled rice inside their warehouse in Balagtas, Bulacan on May 22, 2024.

    Such collection is based on the reduced tariff rate of 15 percent following President Marcos’ Executive Order 62 which took effect last month. The second-semester collection is 53 percent below the initial projection of P17.3 billion for the period.

    This means that about P9.2 billion in rice tariffs have been reduced after the rate was cut to 15 percent from 35 percent. For 2024, total collections could reach up to P31.1 billion, four percent higher than the P29.9 billion collected last year.

    In 2023, tariff collections from 3.6 million metric tons of rice reached about P30 billion, way above the mandated P10 billion supposed to fund farm mechanization, seed development, propagation and promotion, credit assistance, and extension services.

    For the coming years, however, rice tariff collections could be lower if EO 62 is going to be extended.

    By 2025, collections could decline to P20.3 billion but will slightly pick up to P25.5 billion by 2026.

    As prices remain high at about P50 to P55 per kilogram for well-milled rice, National Economic and Development Authority Secretary Arsenio Balisacan said the reduction should not be expected overnight.

    “It takes a while from the time you order to the actual arrival of imports to the distribution. It doesn’t happen overnight,” Balisacan said.

    The Philippine Statistics Authority has said the tariff cut could bring down rice prices by P6 to P7 per kilo and significantly impact rice inflation and the overall headline rate.

    The DOF likewise said that the reduced tariff can ease inflation by up to 1.8 percentage points.

    Source: PhilStar 

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