HomeNewsOpinionWhen governments carelessly risk a food crisis

When governments carelessly risk a food crisis

Price caps on rice could destabilise the market at a time when nations can least afford instability to feed their populations and others

September 18, 2023 / 16:46 IST
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food crisis
An employee tends to rice crops at the International Rice Research Institute headquarters in Los Banos, the Philippines, on June 21, 2023. (Source: Bloomberg)

It’s a diagram that Economics 101 students learn by heart. It puts together supply, demand and prices in a single chart. The graph is the stuff that makes markets tick, whether for iPhones or bowls of rice.  

As an associate professor at the School of Economics at the University of the Philippines, prior to her move into government, Cielo Magno imprinted the supply-and-demand chart on her students’ minds. Typically, supply slopes upward: When prices rise, suppliers are willing to produce more; demand generally slopes downward: At higher prices, consumers buy less.

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Then Magno became her country’s finance undersecretary, building a reputation for speaking her mind. On Sept 1, she posted a common version of the diagram on social media: “I miss teaching…,” she added. Soon after, she was fired. Though Magno didn’t explicitly say it then, through her post, she was questioning the government’s decision to introduce a price cap for rice. If the supply-demand diagram is Economics 101, then price caps are Government 101, distorting how markets are supposed to work. And rice is right now the target of many. Sadly, Magno’s travails in the Philippines aren’t an exception. Across Asia, nations are trying to bend supply and demand curves, attempting to control the cereal grain’s prices.
Carelessly, they are sowing the seeds of a potential food crisis.

Global rice prices have risen to a 12-year high above $600 a metric ton since India, the world’s largest rice exporter, embarked in a beggar-thy-neighbor policy of reducing overseas sales. As a response, importers like the Philippines are doing the opposite, capping prices, in effect boosting demand. Just imagine what happens to global wholesale prices when big exporters reduce supply just as large importers try to cap domestic prices. It’s an explosive cocktail, with international prices the only relief valve.