Grain prices in China have risen -- dramatically -- for the first
time in six years.
Wheat prices in Northeast China's Heilongjiang Province rose by 32
per cent to 1,100 yuan (US$132.5) per ton, according to a Xinhua
News report.
Paddy rice prices in East China's Anhui Province reached 1,050 yuan
(US$126) per ton, up 80 (US$9.6) to 120 yuan (US$14.5) over the
same period last year. And maize prices in Hebei and Shandong
provinces also went up by 50 (US$6) to 70 yuan (US$8) per ton,
according to the report.
The grain price increases also drove up the prices of edible oil,
fodder and other finished products, statistics show.
Li
Chenggui, a senior researcher in rural development with the Chinese
Academy of Social Sciences, told China Daily yesterday the prices
had risen in line with changing supply and demand in domestic and
international grain markets.
"The decrease in both agricultural production and the country's
grain storage is a major factor in the surge in grain prices," the
researcher said.
"The rise in the price of grains on the international market from
last year has also contributed," he added.
Li
said the jump in grain prices was good news for farmers as well as
Chinese agriculture, for it helped to rectify the relationship
between producers and consumers of grains and narrow the gap
between cities and the countryside.
"The growth of per capita annual income of farmers in the country
has been slowed down since 1996 while the income of city dwellers
increased rapidly over these years," Li explained.
The growth in grain prices will also boost the prices of other
agricultural products, he said.
"It also helps to curb the drop in cropping area in the long run,"
the researcher said.
China launched a campaign to restructure agriculture at the
beginning of 2000, lowering its target for agricultural output.
It
is the government's hope that the moves will help agricultural
production match market demand. Crop harvests over the years had
led to record national stockpiles of grain, cotton and other key
products and oversupply in the market, pulling down prices and
slowing the growth of farmers' income.
The government abandoned its set prices for grain and farmers were
encouraged to diversify into products the market wanted more.
(China Daily October 23, 2003)
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