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Business

Shortage of pork buyers noted

- Marianne V. Go -

MANILA, Philippines - There is no pork shortage, only a shortage of pork buyers.

This was the statement of pork producers from the Pork Producers Federation of the Philippines, Inc. (ProPork) and the National Federation of Hog Farmers, Inc. (NFHFI) as they urged the Department of Agriculture and the Bureau of Customs to exert more effort in cracking down on pork smuggling.

Pork producers are saying that the continued influx of imported pork products, which show up even in wet markets, is contributing to the demise of the country’s hog industry.

ProPork president Edwin Chen is urging all pork producers to increase their efficiency and take a more active stance in directly bringing their product directly to the consumers, thereby removing the middlemen who drive retail prices up.

According to pork producers, there is adequate production of hogs.

In fact, the oversupply of hogs has driven down live weight farmgate prices to P80 per kilo from the previous high of P150/kilo.

“There is no pork shortage, but there is a shortage of pork buyers,” Dr. Zosimo de Leon of NFHFI said.

De Leon explained that projections from the Livestock and Poultry Information-Early Warning System (LPI-EWS) of the Bureau of Agricultural Statistics (BAS) are misleading because they base it on “scenarios” using several variables.

Producers, on the other hand, know exactly what is happening on the ground, De Leon said.

Demand for pork, the producers pointed out, has remained low due to continued high retail prices and the influx of imported and possibly smuggled pork products.

It was revealed that while the allowed pork import volume is limited to 54 million kilos under the Minimum Access Volume (MAV), import data last year showed that a total of 120 million kilos of pork was imported.

This consisted of 90 million kilos of offals/fats/skin which is subject to a tiered tariff of five percent, seven percent and 10 percent, and 30 million of choice cuts which is subject to a 35 percent tariff.

Smuggled pork products are normally misdeclared as offals/fats/skins.

Chen, for his part, is urging local pork growers to embark on creating their own brand and putting up their own meatshops/outlets to bring more reasonably priced pork products to consumers.

BUREAU OF AGRICULTURAL STATISTICS

DE LEON

DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE AND THE BUREAU OF CUSTOMS

DR. ZOSIMO

EDWIN CHEN

LIVESTOCK AND POULTRY INFORMATION-EARLY WARNING SYSTEM

MINIMUM ACCESS VOLUME

NATIONAL FEDERATION OF HOG FARMERS

PORK

PORK PRODUCERS FEDERATION OF THE PHILIPPINES

PRODUCERS

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