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China sees grain supply pressure up, spurs production
BEIJING—Beijing saw the third
rainfall of this spring on Tuesday morning, but the shower did little to
relieve the city’s thirst - and economist Wen Tiejun’s worries.
As Chinese meteorologists forecast on Tuesday the worst drought in five
years will continue in north China, including the capital, Wen told
Xinhua the pressure on the grain supply is rising in China, with or
without droughts. “China is feeling a rising pressure to grow enough
grain to feed its population,” said Wen, head of the School of
Agricultural Economics and Rural Development at the Renmin University of
China.
It was an inevitable fallout of lower returns in rural production than
in industrial sectors as the country is in the middle of
industrialization, said Wen. Although China saw a fourth consecutive
rise in grain output last year that met over 95 percent of domestic
needs, Wen noted it’s getting harder to maintain the balance.
“Rural Chinese have been turning away from their lands as they can
increase their income three to four times by working in cities,” he
said. Actual proceeds dropped from 382 yuan (54.3 U.S. dollars) to 320
yuan between 2004 and 2006 for growing each mu (a fifteenth of a
hectare) of grains, dampening farmers’ enthusiasm for raising grain
production, according to vice agricultural minister Yin Chengjie.
Rapid industrialization has seen hundreds of billions of yuan flow out
of the countryside each year, while appropriation of arable lands has
not been effectively checked, both adding to the grain production
pressure, said Wen. Meanwhile, demand has expanded as a yearly average
of 15 million rural laborers moved to cities, needing an extra 4.5
million tonnes of commodity grains each year, said Yin.
Official statistics show that over the past decade, China’s population
increased by 90.59 million and per-capita grain supply decreased from
412 kg in 1996 to 378 kg in 2006. The country’s grain output exceeded
500 million tonnes last year, 15 million tonnes less than the total
demand, as official figures show.
Chinese Premier Wen Jiabao said in a national videophone last week the
government should give “clearer, straighter and stronger signals to
mobilize and protect the initiative of farmers to plant crops.” The
State Council, or the Cabinet, decided last Thursday to spend another
25.25 billion yuan in addition to this year’s rural budget, mainly to
subsidize farmers’ purchase of seeds, diesel, fertilizers and other
production materials.
The Ministry of Finance has rushed to pay out 63.3 billion yuan of
subsidies to farmers ahead of schedule to make the money available in
the coming spring plowing season. The government raised the lowest state
purchasing prices for rice and wheat last week, the second such move
since February.
“Subsidies combined with protective purchasing prices proved effective
in addressing the conflict between grain growth and farmers’ pursuit of
higher income,” said rural policy researcher Li Chenggui with the
Chinese Academy of Social Sciences. But the effect would be limited if
small-scaled, scattered crop planting continues to restrain agricultural
growth, he said.
China has vowed to find a long-term solution to close the rural-urban
gap, increasing rural input and sending farm experts to boost
agricultural productivity. Despite the supply pressure, China is
relatively immune to soaring global rice prices and a world grain strain
as it remains self-sufficient at present, said Li.
Wen said China’s rice supply and demand were basically balanced, while
the gap between domestic and international prices was not big enough to
stimulate large export rises that could cause shortages. Customs figures
show China exported 9.86 million tonnes of grains (soybeans excluded)
last year, but imported only 1.55 million tonnes.
The country has vowed to strictly control grain export to ensure
domestic supply and fight inflation, abolishing tax rebates, levying
temporary duties and imposing quotas on the export of some grain
products like rice and wheat. The price for Thai medium-grade 15 percent
broken rice, a benchmark for the international market, has more than
doubled in the past three months. Several rice exporting countries,
including Vietnam, Philippines and Cambodia, have recently stopped or
cut exports.
—Xinhua |