Jump to content

TDRI says Yingluck’s rice pledging scheme causes almost a trillion baht loss


Lite Beer

Recommended Posts

TDRI says Yingluck’s rice pledging scheme causes almost a trillion baht loss

5-11-2557-13-14-24-wpcf_728x407.jpg

BANGKOK: -- Thailand Development Research Institute (TDRI) says the rice-pledging scheme implemented by the Yingluck government during 2011-2014 has so far caused 660 billion baht loss to the state.

But it says the loss could reach a trillion baht on assumption that the remaining 17 million tons of rice in the stocks are sold out in the next 10 years.

TDRI researcher Dr Nipon Poapongsakorn said in his research on corruption involving the implementation of the rice pledging scheme from 2011 to 2014 that the scheme was considered the highest market intervention scheme in history in which the government had spent up to 980 billion baht to buy up to 54.4 million tons of rice or 53% of total rice output from farmers.

The research revealed that 1.77-1.78 million farmers from total 3.5-3.6 million farmers joining the scheme for the 2012-2013 harvest season.

A total of 826 rice mills and 1,685 warehouses also joined the scheme.

The scheme had 20 rice inspectors.

By end of October 31 this year, it was found that 85% of rice in the stocks have lower quality than normal standard. This low quality rice resulted in the loss of 660 billion baht to the state from the pledging scheme.

He said that if taking into account of the assessment of the remaining 17 million tons of rice in the stocks that could be released in the market within the 10-year period, the loss could jumped 300 billion baht more to 960 billion baht.

He said in the research that the rice-pledging scheme had brought about damages to the societies rather than advantages to farmers and consumers of an estimated 123 billion baht.

Meanwhile farmers joining the scheme obtained additional 296 billion baht in direct revenues. But after the combination of both direct and indirect revenues from the scheme, farmers obtained 561 billion baht in revenues.
But farmers who were benefitted from the scheme were mostly rich and medium earning farmers, rather than poor and low income farmers.

Dr Nipon said the rice-pledging scheme also had 585 billion baht of economic rents or 41% of GDP that resulted in relevant people to seek this special profits from investment in the scheme and was tantamount to extravagantly spend national resources that would obstruct economic growth.

He identified higher cost of rice planting, higher use of irrigation water than the water management plan of the Royal Irrigation Department that will become a water shortage problem for this year.

(Photo : Thai PBS File)

Source: http://englishnews.thaipbs.or.th/tdri-says-yinglucks-rice-pledging-scheme-causes-almost-trillion-baht-loss/

thaipbs_logo.jpg
-- Thai PBS 2014-11-05

Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • Replies 132
  • Created
  • Last Reply

Top Posters In This Topic

And who determines if the rice is good, low or bad quality? What happens to the rice that's determined 'bad'. Who is to say that someone isn't fiddling the books at the moment, using the rice pledge scheme / management as an all to easy scapegoat for increasing losses?

Link to comment
Share on other sites

There have been so many different reports quoting so many different numbers that I no longer believe anything I read regarding this issue. I don't believe it is any longer possible to get to the truth.

If you could muster up believing 25% then you also will see this is diabolical.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Getting use to these stories and more to come.

A well planned coordinated campaign being orchestrated from above to try and turn the voting public against Yingluck and the PTP.

There can't be any protest as in another article martial law and meetings of groups of 5 is still banned.

All one way traffic at the moment with only legal resistance to the onslaught of bias media.

I don't think Yingluck will be impeached as she is far to popular and it would set the reconciliation process on its ear.

If no charges are brought soon then times up and hopefully she will stand again and let the people of Thailand show her detractors just how popular her and her party is.

  • Like 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Getting use to these stories and more to come.

A well planned coordinated campaign being orchestrated from above to try and turn the voting public against Yingluck and the PTP.

There can't be any protest as in another article martial law and meetings of groups of 5 is still banned.

All one way traffic at the moment with only legal resistance to the onslaught of bias media.

I don't think Yingluck will be impeached as she is far to popular and it would set the reconciliation process on its ear.

If no charges are brought soon then times up and hopefully she will stand again and let the people of Thailand show her detractors just how popular her and her party is.

Yingluck PTP. self inflicted wounds...................so popular ??? NOW ???? get out more.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Not bad for a scam positioned as "self-financing' and meant to help poor farmers. Allegedly that is.

It must be like xmas for you rubl - now you can write 1000++ in your interminable posts about revolving rice funds............................coffee1.gif

  • Like 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

If Thaksin Shinawatra wasn't behind this boondoggle, then who was?

Wasn't he in Burma buying up large quantities of cheap Burmese rice to sell to the scheme as Thai rice?

Yes, of course he was..................................coffee1.gif

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Me get out more ginjag?

Mate I've just had 2 rounds of golf and been fishing over the last two days.

Not sit in front of the computer waiting for the big Y subject to come up so I can dominate the thread.

She really has done your head in mate.

Smell the roses for a change.

Your like a wigwam and a teepee .Your two tents!Tense if you didn't get it.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Me get out more ginjag?

Mate I've just had 2 rounds of golf and been fishing over the last two days.

Not sit in front of the computer waiting for the big Y subject to come up so I can dominate the thread.

She really has done your head in mate.

Smell the roses for a change.

Your like a wigwam and a teepee .Your two tents!Tense if you didn't get it.

Were you fishing out the golf balls from the golf lake ??? Has this anything to do with the rice loss ???

Just been shopping at Tesco, and jogging round the lake---not getting fat fishing.-----you could be caught within-tent.

  • Like 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Come on, let's get the audited figures instead of continuous speculation from people like Dr. Nipon or Dr. Warong. what happen to the big hoohah on corruption. Nothing heard so far. Yes there are losses but how much is still as unknown as the little green man in Mars.

  • Like 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

WhizBang, on 05 Nov 2014 - 15:23, said:
BSJ, on 05 Nov 2014 - 14:47, said:

Yingluck has to go to jail. Whatever the maximum sentence that can be imposed should be imposed. Her lack of oversight of the rice scheme is mind boggling!

She won't. I am also willing to bet they do not even bother to impeach her.

This junta seems to have lost the will to go after the corruption that plagues the kingdom, assuming they ever had it to begin with.

I suspect nothing is going to change and it will be back to business as usual real soon. If the good general was serious about reform, he would have jumped on the RTP over the Koh Tao debacle. That he did nothing, and even went so far as to praise them, pretty much says it all.

They won't investigate too high up the corruption ladder, a few "small" fry maybe, but they would be far too scared, that when an elected government is in place, it might just investigate why the PM and his military "friends" have so much money, that can not be accounted for.

  • Like 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

fab4, on 05 Nov 2014 - 16:05, said:
ginjag, on 05 Nov 2014 - 15:47, said:
The stuttering parrot, on 05 Nov 2014 - 15:42, said:

Getting use to these stories and more to come.

A well planned coordinated campaign being orchestrated from above to try and turn the voting public against Yingluck and the PTP.

There can't be any protest as in another article martial law and meetings of groups of 5 is still banned.

All one way traffic at the moment with only legal resistance to the onslaught of bias media.

I don't think Yingluck will be impeached as she is far to popular and it would set the reconciliation process on its ear.

If no charges are brought soon then times up and hopefully she will stand again and let the people of Thailand show her detractors just how popular her and her party is.

Yingluck PTP. self inflicted wounds...................so popular ??? NOW ???? get out more.

Will there ever come a time when you manage to construct a sentence in a grammatical way and abandon this staccato, stream of conciousness, over punctuated nonsense?

Don't feed the troll, if he doesn't get the attention he needs he'll go away..

  • Like 2
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    • No registered users viewing this page.








×
×
  • Create New...