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A customer shops for rice at a
supermarket in Beijing.(Photo: Chinadaily.com) Photo
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BEIJING,
April 5 -- The cost of rice remains stable, despite the staple food's worldwide
price hike, government sources said.
The grain's price is stable in China, the National
Development and Reform Commission said on its website. Meanwhile, the Ministry
of Commerce said the rice retail price has seen a "continual decline" in the
past week.
Rice is a staple food for Chinese, but its price
isn't influenced by the world market as the nation mainly relies on domestic
supply rather than imports to meet demand, traders and agricultural experts
said.
China only imports a small amount of rice for the
high-end market, according to Li Chenggui, an agricultural expert with the
Chinese Academy of Social Sciences. "But the amount of rice China imports from
Thailand is very small, so the higher price won't affect the overall situation,"
Li said.
Rice from Thailand and Vietnam, the world's major
exporters of the product, has seen a sharp price increase, causing turmoil on
the global market.
Rice shortages have been reported in many countries
and consumers have begun stockpiling the product.
The cost of a ton of medium-grade rice from Thailand
has more than doubled since the beginning of the year. A Thai government
official recently said prices could rise higher still, according to a Wall
Street Journal report.
But consumers and the business community in China
remain calm. One trader in Panjin, a key rice-producing area in Liaoning
province, said the price has actually dipped slightly this year.
The Panjin Zhongjin Rice Co trader said the price
hasn't changed much in the past two years. "Rice is actually cheaper now
compared with the winter," the trader, surnamed Su, said. That price drop could
be due to an increase in the area available for rice paddies after the
government encouraged farmers to increase supply, Su said.
China has long been a major rice exporter on the
world market, but late last year the government began curbing exports to ensure
domestic supply.
The government in December removed the export tax
rebate for a series of agricultural products, including wheat and rice.
Meanwhile, it's also increasing subsidies to farmers
to increase supply. It has increased the minimum State purchase price twice this
year as an incentive for farmers.
The government has also been trying to keep a lid on
the market price by enlarging State reserves. The Liaoning trader said the local
grain reserve agency is still buying the grain - usually it only buys rice
during winter.
(Source: China Daily)