VOL NO REGD NO DA 1589

Friday, December 30, 2005

HEADLINE

POLITICS & POLICIES

METRO & COUNTRY

VIEWS & REVIEWS

EDITORIAL

LETTER TO EDITOR

COMPANY & FINANCE

BUSINESS & FINANCE

TRADE/ECONOMY

LEISURE & ENTERTAINMENT

MARKET & COMMODITIES

SPORTS

WORLD

 

FE Specials

FE Education

Urban Property

Monthly Roundup

Saturday Feature

Asia/South Asia

 

Feature

13th SAARC SUMMIT DHAKA-2005

WOMEN & ECONOMY

57th Republic Day of India

US TRADE SHOW

 

 

 

Archive

Site Search

 

HOME

HEADLINE
 
Mismatch between official, open mkt prices lands govt's rice procurement drive into trouble
S M Jahangir
12/30/2005
 

          The government's current 'aman' procurement drive is running into big trouble due to a mismatch between the official purchase rates and the open market prices of the foodgrain.
As a result, the authority is set to miss the internal foodgrain procurement target despite a robust aman output this season, keeping the local rice market volatile.
With the launch of its aman procurement drive on November 25, the government has so far collected only 23,000 tonnes of foodgrain against the target of 200,000 tonnes, official figures showed.
Officials, however, admitted a limited scope for gearing up the domestic foodgrain procurement drive for Aman foodgrain under the present official prices.
The procurement prices of rice and paddy have been fixed at Tk 14 and Tk 9.40 per kg respectively for the current aman season but their prices are considerably higher in the open market.
Due to such price mismatch, private millers prefer selling their rice in the open market to supplying the same to the government.
Admitting such problems, an official of the Food and Disaster Management Ministry said: "It is not possible for us to meet the procurement target under the existing price structure."
The official further said the poor procurement performance would lead the government to go for rice import for running its food operation.
"Since the government has to wait at least four months more to launch the 'boro' procurement drive, it has no alternative but to go for immediate import in order to beef up the official food reserve," said the official.
The government's total food stock has plummeted to about 600,000 tonnes against the comfortable level of 1.0 million tonnes, sources observed.
They also hinted that the government would lose its control over local rice market unless its stock was enhanced immediately.
Despite an adequate supply of the seasonal crop, the prices of rice continued to rise in the market, they noted.
A strong syndicate of rice millers and hoarders are active in creating further price escalation, taking advantages of the government's inadequate food stock, they observed.
A section of officials, however, termed the existing foodgrain stock 'comfortable' for running the official food operation until the next boro season.
Besides, the government would consider rice import to cope with any contingency in the country, they added.

 

 
  More Headline
Central bank governor finds no reason to be over-concerned about forex reserve position
Powerful syndicate compounding container congestion at Ctg port
Mismatch between official, open mkt prices lands govt's rice procurement drive into trouble
General provision for banks with huge branches having no online facilities relaxed
Sunny on 116-day remand in 19 cases
Patel arrives in city next week to discuss DSC-IV
It is time for fine words to give way to meaningful action
SEC to frame two new rules for capital market
Indian cabinet approves Safta
Explosives, hand bombs recovered from Sylhet frontier
DCC floats re-tender for 4 cattle mkts
Tannery owners demand Tk 5.0b loan ahead of Eid-ul Azha
Getting the problem to solve itself
16 more SOEs to be privatised in six months
Peak season frozen food export slump likely to upset target
DSE sees negative growth in 2005
Fine china and Indian tea
India loses 46pc global textile market, China gains 700pc
India loses 46pc global textile market, China gains 700pc
New accounting guidelines for MFIs, NGOs soon
Eviction of illegal structures on Shitalakhya banks begins Jan 1
Plan to build Gulistan-Jatrabari flyover without removing settlements
Developments in the region and abroad
 

Print this page | Mail this page | Save this page | Make this page my home page

About us  |  Contact us  |  Editor's panel  |  Career opportunity | Web Mail

 

 

 

 

Copy right @ financialexpress.com