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HEADLINES

NEDA hit to detail  rice tariff cut

By Nidz Godino

“It suddenly appeared at the NEDA Board on June 3…we will ask, as far as possible, who went to NEDA Board meeting and if there is  transcript to provide…if necessary, there will be  executive session just so we can know  root of this EO 62 modifying  Nomenclature and Rates of Import Duty on Various Products,” Sen. Imee Marcos said. National Economic and Development Authority (NEDA) should make public  details of  June 3 NEDA Board meeting  resulted in government’s controversial decision to cut  tariff on imported rice to 15 percent up to 2028.

Marcos made  call after Senate hearing into proposed amendments to  Rice Tariffication Law (Republic Act 11203) and Rice Competitiveness Enhancement Fund (RA 8178) showed  proposal did not come from agricultural stakeholders, and was never raised during three consultative hearings of  Tariff Commission in 2023.

“Clearly, this was  small meeting…it was just  board meeting, right… so it can hardly be considered  public hearing with stakeholders and others,” Marcos said.

NEDA Board is composed of the President as chairman and NEDA secretary as vice chairman, with members:  executive secretary, special assistant to the president for investment and economic affairs, secretary of finance and secretary of budget and management.

Marcos noted  transcripts of  March, September and October 2023 consultative meetings and public hearings held by  Tariff Commission,  no mention of  15 percent rice tariff rate taking effect for four and a half years.

Tariff Commissioner Marissa Paderon explained  proposed changes to  tariff lines “came from  parties” present during  meetings.

“In reading that transcript, was there any new tariff rate on rice proposed or discussed… I can’t see anything…throughout  transcript, no one howled, and no one said to drop  tariff to 15 percent…. I didn’t see anything in  full transcript… I turned it upside down. ..where did that come from…if you say  it will come from someone who will raise his hand and suggest new tariff…not in the transcript,” Marcos said, pointing out  lack of due process in  implementation of  rice tariff cut.

Marcos also lamented how farmers’ groups, federations and other agricultural stakeholders and  Senate were left out of  consultative meetings.

Farmer’ groups and rice millers present during  Senate hearing bared they were not even invited to  2023 consultative meetings on tariff lines, the senator noted. 

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