Leo Lewis, Asia Business Correspondent
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The United States and Japan are poised to strike a deal that will remove one of the most widely reviled distortions in global rice markets and could send prices plummeting in the coming weeks.
The move, which will flood the market with an estimated 1.5 million tonnes of high-grade American rice that is sitting in Japanese silos, comes amid continuing rice export restrictions by some of the world's biggest suppliers and rioting in countries where the population cannot afford the price increases.
Senior government sources in Tokyo told The Times that Japan had received permission from Washington to begin exports from its giant, but largely hidden, mountain of unwanted American rice to countries that need it most. The exposure of the vast Japanese rice surplus has emerged as one of the chief imbalances of world rice markets and an effect of the complex and wasteful lattice of rules, subsidies and pacts that have knocked global agriculture markets so badly out of kilter.
Rice experts say that the move could defuse temporarily one of the principal catalysts of the food-price crisis - the perception that the world is running out of rice - and the panic and hoarding that has accompanied it. With commodities traders sniffing that a US-Japan deal was imminent, rice futures ended the Asian trading week in a dramatic nosedive as the prospect of a sudden supply surge and bullish harvest forecasts routed speculative money from the market.
The collapse came as think-tanks and food experts called on Japan and the US to urgently unwind one of the biggest “invisible” distortions in global rice markets: a quirk of World Trade Organisation (WTO) rules that obliges Tokyo to buy rice it does not need and that eventually rots in storage. The WTO rule, its many critics say, effectively turns millions of tonnes of high-grade American produce into feed for Japanese hogs and chickens.
Researchers at the Washington-based Centre for Global Development (CGD) said that if that distortion were removed, and the 1.5 million tonnes of unwanted US rice were released from Japan's storage silos, the crisis that has sent the price of the crop that feeds half the world surging up would be solved instantly. The centre has suggested that rice prices could halve by the end of the month.
Standing in the way of that, however, has been a rule that prevents Japan from re-exporting its reserves of US rice without permission from Washington, which has not been forthcoming until now because of the fear of domestic political repercussions from the US rice industry.
A concerted political effort, CGD researchers said, would prick the speculative bubble and the hoarding mentality that has sent rice prices into the stratosphere. They wrote: “What's needed now is a sudden surge of unexpected supplies ... to reassure anxious countries and poor people around the world that there is indeed enough rice for everybody.”
Benchmark rice futures indices tumbled 5 per cent yesterday amid a frenzy of sell orders that pushed the key contract below the $20-per-100lb mark. Adding to the sharp drop were forecasts of a good harvest, which contributed to a 14 per cent fall in the rice price over the week.
Traders gave warning, however, that many of the factors that propelled rice prices to their recent highs remained in place. The cyclone in Burma has effectively turned that country from an exporter to an importer or rice, and export restrictions in India and Vietnam remain in place.
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Anyone living in Japan for a period of time learns that Japanese rice is better than most American rice. Deal with it. When you talk about brown rice or brown basmati rice, the picture changes. However, that's a small percentage of the market.
Bryant, Tokyo, Japan
Tateishi says "Japanese can't eat American rice". No, they "don't want to". Japanese rice has mythical proportions in Japan. By the way, American "Calrose" is a variant of "japonica" rice, of the same family grown in Japan, such as "Koshihikari". I.e., NOT "completely different".
dfavonjettmar, Fort Worth, TX, U.S.A.
To those commentors accusing this article of anti-Americanism, please note that this article cites the American rice in Japanese silos as *one* of the causes of world food shortage, not *the* cause.
Seems like some have guilty consciences....
Brijit , Paris, France
WTO rules on agricultural products should be overhauled to help ensure food security for people specially for the least developed countries. It should not be used to pander to the greed of agriculturally developed countries. Unethical artificial non-existent markets for food products should be ban
Luis, Manila, Philippines
WTO's rule should be overhauled to help ensure food security for all specially the least developed countries. Unethical artificial non-existent markets for food products should be banned.
Luis, Manila, Philippines
What is now surfacing is the incompetence and sheer bloody mindedness of politicians worldwide, and its getting worse by the year. If this continues there are going to be population riots and dead presidents. The world now is being controlled by men who are deep into madness. Just think about it
Phil de Buquet, Newport,
The point of this article: IT'S AMERICA'S FAULT!! What's new?
Hey, I also heard that America caused that giant cyclone to hit Burma and that massive Earthquake in China. Oh yeah, I almost forgot: all those people in India and China who are getting rich and eating more... America's fault.
Haile, Cleveland, America
If my math is correct, 1.5 million tons is a little over 3 billion pounds. The article says over 3 billion people are fed with rice. So,it seems that amounts to about two cups per person. WoW! That should make a big difference. And, if those pigs and cattle have a market, what grain next?
L.N. Pete, Spokane,
From the tone of this article and comments it would be easy to assume that the rice shortage is somehow caused by the USA and not by rising demand, speculators, natural disasters, and dictators like Mugabe shutting down their farms. How can US food security policy possibly have a bearing on this?
Steve, London, UK
Sorry Sam, But you cannot just use the intellectually lazy "blame America" argument on this. America is an exporter of rice. Asian countries use the logic, cited above, that their people do not want to eat this "different" rice. And yet like Japan, they buy it. Why ? Can you say "price supports"?
Winston Rodney, Lake Charles, La, USA
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