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Does President Duterte want to abolish the NFA Council, the policymaking body of the
National Food Authority, to end the conflict between the two over the shortage in the
supply of government-subsidized rice?
Yes, says Agriculture Secretary Manny Piñol. No, says presidential spokesperson Harry
Roque.
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The confusion over what the President intended to do with the NFA Council followed a
meeting between Mr. Duterte and rice traders on Thursday night.
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“He has abolished the NFA Council and he will transfer the NFA and other agencies
related to agriculture that were removed from the Department of Agriculture back to the
DA,” Piñol said in an interview with dzMM radio on Friday.
In the meeting with the rice merchants, Mr. Duterte said he wanted to remove
bureaucratic bottlenecks in the rice trade, according to James Magbanua, national
president of the Grains Retailers Confederation of the Philippines.
“It’s NFA that will be transferred to (the Office of the President) with the council,” he
said.
Centralization
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He also said Mr. Duterte is considering centralizing the approval of rice importations
under Agriculture Undersecretary Bernadette Romulo-Puyat.
In a speech during a belated birthday celebration hosted for him by a member of the
House of Representatives after his meeting with rice traders,
Mr. Duterte said he told NFA Administrator Jason Aquino that he still trusted him.
He said there were indications of a possible shortage and directed Aquino to ignore the
NFA Council and to import rice. He did not say how much should be imported.
“It is not really an actual shortage. But when you start to see something which is also
true, it cannot be rumormongering because what is at stake is the stomach of the people.
I told him, ‘Ignore the rice council which is mandated by law, go ahead and make the
importations,’” he said.
Thursday’s meeting between the President and the rice traders came amid reports of
dwindling NFA rice reserves and growing friction between the grains agency and its
policymaking body.
Cabinet Secretary Leoncio Evasco, who chairs the NFA Council, earlier said the NFA
was creating an artificial rice shortage by saying its reserves had been wiped out.
Evasco said the NFA’s statement could prompt rice traders to hoard their stocks in
anticipation of higher prices. He also said there was enough rice in the country, as
attested to by the DA.
The 18-member council, which includes representatives from financial institutions and
other related agencies, has the authority to approve or reject proposals from the NFA
management.
Members of its board include officials from the NFA, Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas,
Landbank of the Philippines, Development Bank of the Philippines, National Economic
and Development Authority, Office of the President, and a representative from rice
farmers.
Council as watchdog
Abolishing the council would be turning a blind eye to allegations of corruption “and
condones incompetence and mismanagement” by NFA Administrator Aquino, he said.
“He (Aquino) and not the NFA Council should be removed from the public
management of the country’s rice supply,” he added.
‘House cleaning’
Under the previous administration, Pangilinan was tasked to do “house cleaning” in
four agencies that were moved from the agriculture department to the Office of the
President—NFA, Philippine Coconut Authority, National Irrigation Administration,
and Fertilizer and Pesticide Authority.
In the radio interview, Piñol said the President was looking to return the four agencies
to the DA.
He added that the President wanted only one focal person for each agency to streamline
operations.
“That is his style of governance because he believes that if he only talks to one person,
he’ll get only one [set of] data and there is no other person to blame, and I also believe
in this concept,” Piñol said.