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Bacolod City, PhilippinesSaturday, April 12, 2008
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ON PRICE INCREASES
Bakers to make
collective stand

BY CARLA GOMEZ

The Bacolod Negros Occidental Bakers Association is meeting with its members in order to come up with a collective position in addressing the rising prices of flour and other inputs.

Cynthia Magalona, BACNOBA president, said she has experienced a 15 to 20 percent increase in production costs.

The Philippine Federation of Bakers Association on Thursday announced in Manila that, staring April 15, the price of pandesal would be raised.

Senator Mar Roxas yesterday criticized the government for its knee-jerk reactions to the rice crisis that have set off adverse effects on the rest of the food chain and that are stoking the emotions of the people.

“It is clear that the government doesn’t know what it is doing. Until now, the administration has not acknowledged that we do have a rice crisis which affects Filipino families across the nation,” he said, adding that the prices of oil, rice and other food commodities are all inter-connected.

“In normal times, the workingman’s breakfast is a choice between pandesal or a bowl of lugaw in a nearby market. But now he is caught in a rut, because both items have become more expensive,” he said.

Roxas added that prices of processed and canned meats would also go up due to several factors, such as tighter quantitative restrictions on imported meat, increasing prices of locally-produced meat and of tin cans as well as higher transport costs due to soaring oil prices. Prices of meat are also affected by the decreasing supply and increasing costs of feeds, such as wheat and corn.

“At the same time, the government is inviting public indignation by randomly announcing raw ideas without prior consultations with the sectors who are concerned and affected,” he said.

“President Arroyo has to take charge, be open to the people, and gather the whole national team together to bear upon this multi-faced challenge,” he said.

The senator lamented the preoccupation of the administration with deceptive visuals – only a few lining up for cheap rice, stacks of rice in NFA warehouses, repacking of rice into smaller bags, the use of indelible ink, and soldiers as distributors of rice stocks—that only aggravate public anxieties instead of allaying them.

“Due to the high commercial prices of rice, the NFA’s limited supply of cheaper varieties of rice will never be enough to feed our hungry population,” Roxas said.

The president can heed the people’s call for immediate relief by suspending the 12 percent VAT on oil and petroleum products, he said.*CPG

 

 

 

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