DA asks Marcos to extend rice import ban until end of 2025
The Department of Agriculture (DA) on Saturday said it has recommended to President Ferdinand “Bongbong” Marcos Jr. the extension of the temporary ban on rice importation until the end of 2025.
The 60-day import ban, which took effect in September, expired on Friday, October 31.
The import restriction was imposed to stem the declining prices of palay, which affected local farmers.
The DA said the import ban initially lifted prices, but gains have since tapered off.
With this, Agriculture Secretary Francisco Tiu Laurel Jr. is seeking to extend the import ban for an additional 30 to 60 days.
The extension, Tiu Laurel explained, would allow a fuller evaluation of the policy’s impact on both farmgate and retail markets; continue protecting local farmers from downward price pressures caused by cheaper imports; sustain market stability and consumer welfare; and enable policymakers to integrate more indicators—such as warehouse inventories and trade flows—for a more comprehensive assessment.
Tiu Laurel said palay prices in major producing provinces such as Isabela and Nueva Ecija had climbed to P13 to P14 per kilo from as low as P8 in some areas before the import freeze.
He said reports from the DA’s Regional Rice Program showed that prices peaked at P16.50 per kilo from September 8 to 12 before easing to P13.50 by September 15 to 19. The cost of production is between P12 and P14 per kilogram.
“This demonstrates that while upward adjustments have been observed, farmgate prices remain volatile, and the harvest is still underway across much of the country,” said Tiu Laurel.
He added that extending the import ban is a “necessary measure to provide sustained support to local producers, maintain market stability, and ensure a more comprehensive assessment of the policy’s effects.”
For consumers, the DA’s Agribusiness and Marketing Assistance Service (AMAS) found that retail rice prices have remained broadly stable.
AMAS data showed imported rice prices fell significantly, with regular-milled rice dropping from P40 per kilo in August to P37 by mid-September, while well-milled rice eased from P50 to P48 per kilo.
Local rice prices, meanwhile, have shown greater stability. Projections indicate they will settle at around P42 per kilo for well-milled rice and P40 per kilo for regular-milled rice by November.
“These developments suggest that consumer welfare has not been adversely affected by the suspension,” Tiu Laurel said.
“Meanwhile, supply projections confirm that availability remains sufficient even under a 120-day import suspension. Conservative estimates show rice supply lasting 87 days by year-end, while the optimistic scenario projects 90 days,” he added.
He said that current buffer stocks exceed food security thresholds and are higher by 1.12 million metric tons than the 2024 ending stock, which covered 61 days of consumption.
The DA also reported that recent weather disturbances are unlikely to cause significant production losses toward the end of the year. — VBL, GMA Integrated News