A Change of Guard

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Friday 6 January 2012

Traders at border say Thais ban corn sales

By Rann Reuy
Friday, 06 January 2012
The Phnom Penh Post

Cambodia farmers and traders along the Thai border claim corn prices have fallen as the result of an import ban by the neighbouring kingdom, leaving them with excess stores of the crop and no buyers.

But Thai officials in Phnom Penh have been quick to point out that any ban must have been initiated by the private sector, not by Thailand’s government.

Pailin-based trader Chea Kea said he had 10,000 tonnes of corn in storage, and the price per kilogram had fallen about 100 riels to 1,080 riels since the ban was imposed two weeks ago. “Now it is chaos due to having products, but no buyers,” he said.

Farmers could keep dry corn in storage for some time, but lacked the capital to replant, Chea Kea said.

He said Cambodian customs officials had confirmed the ban, which they claimed was the result of Thai officials responding to complaints from Thai farmers worried about competition from their Cambodian counterparts.

Chea Kea said he had assumed the ban was temporary, but did not know when it would end.

The corn ban was also confirmed by Cheam Chansophoan, director of Battambang’s provincial agricultural department. The Thais were prioritising their farmers’ crops, he said.

Jiranun Wongmongkol, commercial counsellor at the Thai embassy in Phnom Penh, said yesterday she knew of no such ban and did not believe it was a Thai government policy.

The move had most likely been agreed to by both sides, given the increased corn supplies along the border, Jiranun said. Thai corn had also dropped in price, she claimed.

“I think both sides’ traders agreed to stop awhile, because near Battambang and Pailin there is a lot of Thai corn,” Jiranun said, adding that an influx of Cambodian corn also would have hurt prices across the border.

3 comments:

Anonymous said...

if this kind the cambodian officers allow the ban to go ahead, it is very unfair for Cambodian farmer.

Anonymous said...

It's free market. Why banning it? I don't get it.

These officials doesn't understand the laws of basic economics. As supply increased, price decrease, and vice versa. Let the market dictates the price. Not by some lobbyists.

Anonymous said...

Cambodia should retaliate. Thailand has banned Cambodian produce many times before but Cambodia never retaliated, so it's time to retaliate. After all, Thailand will be at the losing end because it has a huge trade surplus with Cambodia. Cambodia should just ban the most popular Thai products that are being imported through the border trades in a retaliation. If we don't retaliate, the Thais will do whatever they wanted.