
Japanese consumers scramble to grab cheap rice; government ready to release more
TOKYO: Japan's farm minister said on Tuesday (Jun 3) the government stood ready to offer more stockpiled rice as consumers formed long queues to snatch up cheap, emergency-use grain made available through some retailers since the weekend.
In an abrupt change of policy, the government last week began selling stockpiled rice directly to retailers, aiming to get a 5kg bag to consumers for around ¥2,000 (US$14) - less than half of average prices.
Those products started hitting some store shelves at the weekend, when hundreds of people waited in line for hours at retailers such as Ito-Yokado and Aeon despite being allowed just one bag per household.
The doubling in rice prices since last year, partly due to extreme heat impacting production, has become a major concern for voters and policymakers ahead of two key elections - for the Tokyo metropolitan assembly on Jun 22 and parliament's upper house in July.
"I never thought the price of stockpiled rice would fall this low," said 75-year-old Kazumi Uchida as she waited in line at an Ito-Yokado store in Tokyo on a rainy Saturday. "I'm almost out of rice and was shifting to eat more bread and noodles."
Average supermarket prices fell for the first time in three weeks in the seven days to May 25, but only by ¥25 to average ¥4,260 / 5kg, showing limited impact from the release of stockpiled rice under the previous auction system involving several layers of wholesalers.
Farm Minister Shinjiro Koizumi, who scrapped that system upon taking his post on May 21, said the government could also consider buying back rice from wholesalers that had participated in those auctions since March, potentially bringing more of the staple grain to market at lower prices.
He repeated that the government stood ready to release all of its stockpile if necessary.
"If we let rice prices remain high, (store) shelves will be filled with imported rice," he said.
It remains to be seen how the artificially cheap stockpiled rice would affect the price of single-origin "brand" rice and other products. Rice production is expected to rise for the 2025 harvest year.
As homegrown rice prices soared, demand for cheaper, foreign-made rice has also surged, even after the hefty levy Japan imposes to protect producers of its staple rice, beyond the tariff-free "minimum access" quota.
Private rice imports, while still tiny, quadrupled in the first 11 months of fiscal 2024 to just under 1,500 metric tons. Japan's fiscal year runs from April to March.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


CNA
2 hours ago
- CNA
New crane tips over at Tuas Port during delivery; no injuries reported
SINGAPORE: A new crane tipped over at Tuas Port as it was being delivered, said the Maritime and Port Authority of Singapore (MPA) and PSA Singapore in a joint media statement on Sunday (Jun 15). The new quay crane was being delivered to a non-operational berth at about 1.20pm on Sunday when it tipped over. There were no injuries or fatalities, said MPA and PSA. A video of the incident's aftermath circulating online shows the fallen crane with clouds of dust kicked up around it, as someone off camera says in Mandarin that the crane has fallen. "No damage has been assessed to adjacent port equipment and facilities," said MPA and PSA. "All of PSA's current operational berths remain fully accessible, and all port operations and port development works remain unaffected." MPA and PSA added that the incident is under investigation, and that the two organisations will work with the relevant authorities regarding the incident. Envisioned to be the world's largest automated container terminal in the world when completed, PSA's Tuas Port started operations in 2021. The port had 11 berths in operation as of May, with the opening of one more berth expected this year. Four more berths are scheduled to become operational in 2026, and a further two in 2027.


CNA
3 hours ago
- CNA
Taiwan set to hold rates steady with economy strong: Reuters poll
TAIPEI :Taiwan's central bank is likely to maintain its policy interest rate this week and keep it steady through the first quarter of next year, given the strong performance of the tech-focused economy, according to economists in a Reuters poll. In March, the central bank left the benchmark discount rate at 2 per cent, as expected, after raising it from 1.875 per cent in March 2024 in anticipation of a rise in electricity prices. At its next quarterly meeting on Thursday, it is expected to keep the rate steady, according to 29 of the 30 economists surveyed. Economists who provided forecasts beyond this week predicted the bank will maintain its stance through the first quarter of 2026, when they forecast a rate cut to 1.875 per cent. Taiwan's tech-centred, export-dependent economy has been supported by demand from the artificial intelligence boom, which has driven orders for companies such as TSMC, the world's largest contract chipmaker. "Taiwan's economy is stable and inflation is moderate, so there is no need to cut interest rates," said analyst Chiang Kuang-yu of Masterlink Investment Advisory. The economy is expected to expand 3.1 per cent this year due to the AI boom, the government's statistics agency said last month, though that is slower than last year's growth of 4.59 per cent given uncertainty over U.S. tariffs. On inflation, Taiwan's consumer price index (CPI) rose by a lower-than-forecast 1.55 per cent in May, its lowest level in more than four years. The central bank, which considers 2 per cent its "warning" line, has made easing inflation a priority. Still, Taiwanese policymakers have warned of the impact to the trade-dependent economy posed by higher tariffs threatened by U.S. President Donald Trump. Taiwan and the United States remain in talks to resolve the issue. The central bank is expected to maintain a wait-and-see stance before the end of Trump's 90-day pause on his "reciprocal" tariff rates in early July, Oxford Economics said in a research report. "However, with tariff risks potentially re-emerging from the third quarter and the real estate market continuing to cool, the central bank is projected to initiate an interest rate cut cycle by the end of this year," it added. The Taiwan central bank decision will come one day after the U.S. Federal Reserve, which is widely expected to hold interest rates steady. The Taiwan central bank will also announce its revised economic growth and inflation forecasts for this year on Thursday.


CNA
3 hours ago
- CNA
Vietmam lawmakers abolish district-level government
HANOI: Vietnam's National Assembly approved amendments to the constitution on Monday (Jun 16) to abolish an entire level of government, as part of major reforms to the way the communist country is run. Lawmakers voted unanimously to do away with district-level administration, reducing the governmental structure to two layers – provinces and communes. The move is the latest in a series of drastic changes to Vietnamese government aimed at saving billions of dollars in expenditure by cutting one in five public sector jobs. In February they slashed the number of government ministries, resulting in 23,000 job losses. The dramatic changes echo the steps taken by US President Donald Trump and Argentina's Javier Milei to take an axe to government spending. But in a communist system where working for the state has long meant a job for life, the reforms piloted by party chief To Lam have caused some unease. Lam, the Communist Party general secretary and top national leader, has said the drastic restructuring is needed if Vietnam is to achieve "fast, stable and sustainable development" in its quest to be a middle-income country by 2030. The National Assembly also voted on Monday to reorganise the lowest level of government, reducing the number of communes from over 10,000 to around 3,300. With this "important reform", the size of communes will be expanded, Minister of Interior Pham Thi Thanh Tra said. The move will mean eliminating around 120,000 part-time jobs at the commune level, Tra said last week. The governmental reforms follow a huge, wide-ranging anti-corruption drive that has seen dozens of senior government figures and top business leaders caught up. Export-dependent manufacturing hub Vietnam is aiming for 8 per cent economic growth this year after hitting 7.1 per cent last year. But a 46 per cent trade tariff threatened by Trump is causing anxiety, and Vietnamese negotiators are locked in talks with their US counterparts to find a solution.