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Archive for June, 2008

27.06.08

5 is to 1

- US relations -

Official photo and caption:

ph1-062608.jpg

STANDING OVATION FOR PGMA — President Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo receives a standing ovation at the reception of the Philippine-US Friendship Caucus at the Veterans Committee Hearing Room, Cannon House Office Building at the US Capitol Complex on Independence Avenue, Washington D.C. this morning (Wednesday, Washington time). Directly behind the President is Rep. John Filner while at right is Rep. Darrel Issa, two of the leading supporters of the Filipino veterans bill in the US House of Representatives. Aside from Filner and Issa, eight other US congressmen attended the reception. Also shown are some of the Filipino officials and World War II veterans. (Rodolfo Manabat-OPS/NIB Photo)

That’s 10 U.S. Congressmen versus 52 Filipino Congressmen who accompanied the President on her trip (give or take a couple of last-minute cancellations). A 5:1 ratio.

26.06.08

Bringing home the genetically-modified bacon

- US relations -

There’s something about the slap-dash nature of the Palace propaganda corps that bugs me. Take the caption for this official photo:

ph1-062508.jpg

Official caption: US-RP AGRI ACCORD–Washington DC.–President Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo watches approvingly as Agriculture Secretary Arthur Yap shakes hands with US Agriculture Secretary Edward Schaefer after the two signed a Framework of Agreement and Cooperation on Agricultural-Related Fields between RP Department of Agriculture and the US Department of Agriculture this afternoon (Washington time) at the Federal Suite of the “Willard Hotel in Washington DC. Also in photo is Foreign Affairs Secretary Alberto Romulo (2nd from left).

Well what’s wrong with it? First of all, it’s Schefer, not Schaefer; and while I think the simpler explanation for the gobbledygook in the caption above -what is a “Framework of Agreement and Cooperation on Agricultural-Related Fields”- is that the caption writer was clueless when it came to what was being signed or its relative importance, there’s also the possibility the whole photo-op will be less milk-able if the public actually knew what the two cabinet members had just signed.

The Americans are less opaque about these things though, than we are. So, see the US Department of Agriculture’s own press release:

Agriculture Secretary Ed Schafer today signed a memorandum of agreement with Philippine Agriculture Secretary Arthur C. Yap to promote agricultural trade and investment between the two countries. The objective is to advance agricultural cooperation, productivity and sustainable natural resource management through science and technology collaboration. In addition to the memorandum, USDA will sponsor a trade and investment mission to the Philippines sometime in the fall…

…The Philippines is a key market in Southeast Asia for U.S. agricultural exports, with sales reaching over $950 million in fiscal year 2007, the highest level ever. The United States remains the top food and beverage supplier to the Philippines. At the same time, the United States is the number one market for Filipino agricultural products, with sales for more than $621 million in fiscal year 2007, including coconut oil, tropical fruits and vegetables and sugar.

The Philippines is the first Asian country to approve the planting of a biotechnology food crop—corn—and remains a consistent supporter of rational, science-based regulations in many international bodies. The Philippines remain on schedule to commercialize genetically engineered, insect-resistant eggplant in 2009 and virus-resistant papaya and nutritionally-enhanced rice soon thereafter.

So they committed to maintaining a healthy market for American exports, and putting together a junket for American agriculturists close to the election, and most of all, to pursuing the export and use of genetically-modified corn, eggplants, papaya and then rice. I’m sure the environmentalists will find this agreement something to chew on.

18.06.08

For your consideration: lessons learned from past food subsidies

- Uncategorized -

it may be useful, at this point, to take a look at this report: “14 Food Subsidies in the Philippines: Preliminary Results”, by Marito Garcia. See: ppa88ch14.pdf” t

03.06.08

Is Mindanao hitting the fan?

- Philippine politics -

Yesterday’s headline screamed, Soaring rice prices grip Mindanao folk: Staple sold at P45-P51 per kilo. This is only the latest problem in a cluster of problems that periodically drift into the headlines and then out again.

Blogger Radioactive Adobo recently recounted, and asked:

Last weekend, I was in Robinson’s Supermarket and vowed never to buy veggies there. I mean, seriously - a bunch of local pechay for Php 11? A piece of ampalaya for Php 30? I have always enjoyed going to the market and that’s what I do all the time, except for this particular visit. This morning at the Masinag Wet Market, turned out that a bunch of pechay is Php 10 already (Php 5 only a few months ago). The cheapest rice in my area sells for Php 31 and the most expensive is Php 45 (Jasmine), but in Mindanao where food is known to rot in markets because of overabundance, why did this happen? Something is terribly wrong down South.

If you look at Inquirer.net’s Rice Map, you’ll see why I think that one main problem is no one seems to really have a clue as to what’s going on in Mindanao. And that most significantly, at the forefront of the clueless is our government as a whole and not just the administration.

Just two screencaps to show you what I mean.

Here are rice price data for Iloilo and Kidapawan cities:

iloiloriceprices.jpg

kidapawanriceprices.jpg

Look at all the “N/A” or “not available” fields!

Now you tell me just how anyone, starting with our officials, whether in the bureaucracy of the Departments of Finance, Trade and Industry, or of Agriculture, or the National Economic Development Authority or even the Central Bank, or other agencies such as the National Food Authority, can be expected to come up with a timely appreciation of conditions if their data isn’t even complete?

For some time now, a mystery that’s bugged me is why rice prices are so high in Iloilo (it’s marked on the rice prices map with a red balloon), when Panay’s bulging with rice and as a port city, it should have access to rice from other markets. Add to this mystery the new mystery in Mindanao, which has also had bumper crops and yet now has a sudden increase in rice prices.

Take a look at this article in The Asia Sentinel, Rice Shortage: Crisis or Hype? According to the writer, Jet Damazo-

The leader of the world’s largest rice importer, President Gloria Macapagal Arroyo, is now being attacked by critics for actions that would otherwise have been praised if the shortage had been real—raising farm gate prices to encourage local farmers to produce more rice, jailing rice hoarders and promoting alternative staples like sweet potatoes to her rice-consuming constituents — saying these led to more hoarding and pushed prices higher. The Philippines, it turns out, has 54 days of rice stocks on hand, nearly double China’s….

So was the rice shortage real or perceived? Adam Barclay, a spokesperson for the International Rice Research Institute (IRRI), based in the Philippines, maintains that the real underlying cause of the rice price increase is the long-term imbalance between demand and supply, which has gradually pushed up prices since 2001…

Food security expert Mohiuddin Alamgir, former director for policy and planning at the International Fund for Agricultural Development and currently a consultant with the Asian Development Bank, also agrees that the country’s actions, along with speculative commodities traders and opportunistic rice traders, contributed to the spike in prices.

“There is a structural gap in the country’s supply and demand of rice, which is why the Philippines is now the world’s largest importer of rice. The world knows this and so the country’s actions will always impact the market,” Alamgir explained, adding that the manner in which the government came into the market can be debated, as it may have sent the wrong signal. But, he says, had it not been for Arroyo’s actions, the country would have been in a worse situation, prices today would have been much higher, and lines at the government’s subsidized rice stores would have been longer.

So to give credit where credit it due, the President stopped a bad situation from getting worse -or did she? So what’s going on in Mindanao?

Could it be, that people are hoarding, in expectation of fighting resuming between Muslim rebels and the government? Recall my recent entry here, Some readings on Mindanao. The unraveling of the peace talks has been taking place almost in slow motion. You may also want to revisit an entry I wrote in my own blog in 2007, Thoughts on Mindanao, as well as a more recent column, The quest for an honest broker.


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Inquirer Current. A current-events blog by Inquirer columnist Manuel L. Quezon III and Inquirer editor John Nery.
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