Demand Exceeds Supply For Rice Throughout Asia
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The Pressure Is On For Rice Farmers
Asian governments have long focused on developing high-growth sectors, such as manufacturing, and meeting the infrastructure requirements of increasingly urban populations. But that has been coupled with a neglect for farming that is now hurting as a larger and more affluent population demands more food, thereby also contributing to surging world prices for staples such as rice and soyabeans. Such neglect is particularly worrying because nearly two-thirds, or 641m, of the world’s poor live in the Asia-Pacific region, with rural poor accounting for some 70% of those.
Asian governments have shown chronic complacency towards agriculture since reaping the benefits of the green revolution three decades ago. Then, US research led by Norman Borlaug allowed India and other Asian nations to switch to higher-yielding farming techniques and rapidly gain self-sufficiency in crops such as wheat. A clear example is the demise of extension services in many Asian countries. While officials from agricultural ministries used to visit rural areas to train farmers and introduce new technologies, “this provision of public service has now almost collapsed”.
Thailand is ahead of Asian peers on productivity. But it is not immune to the distribution problems and even criminal activities undermining the region’s farming. A surge in crop prices is believed to have been accompanied by increasing theft. According to local reports, some Thai farmers have been waking up to find outsiders have harvested their entire crop overnight.
China and India, meanwhile, have both made substantial pledges to farmers in their latest budgets, with India waiving some $15bn in loans to small farmers. The challenge for China, where a wealthier population has more than doubled its meat consumption over two decades, is the limited availability of arable land rather than poor production. China is a leader in the use of fertilisers, at levels about three times the world average per hectare, and most of the easy productivity gains have already been achieved. Hail to rice farmers!