With consumers battered by the rising prices of agricultural staples like onions, amendments to Republic Act No. (RA) 10845, or the Anti-Agricultural Smuggling Act of 2016, has been proposed by Senate Deputy Majority Leader Senator Joseph Victor “JV” Ejercito in Senate Bill No. (SB) 1688 to make it more effective against the smuggling of agricultural goods.
In the bill’s explanatory note, Ejercito stressed that “our ultimate goal is safeguarding our farmers, consumers, and the agricultural sector, and attaining the goal of food security for the country.”
The senator lamented that “the country has been experiencing the highest price of onion in history: an all-time high of 700 pesos per kilogram.”
“This was made worse by reports of smuggling and price manipulations by unscrupulous people.”
Under the proposed measure, aside from smuggling, the hoarding, profiteering, and cartels of sugar, corn, pork, poultry, garlic, onion, carrots, fish, and cruciferous vegetables in the amount of one million pesos, or rice for P10 million will be considered economic sabotage.
SB 1688 now also punishes hoarding, profiteering, and the cartels involved in agricultural products with imprisonment of not less than 17 years.
Those guilty of the said offenses will also be fined twice the fair value of the profiteered, hoarded, and cartelled agricultural product.
The aggregate amount of the taxes, duties, and other charges avoided, on the other hand, shall be imposed on the officers of dummy corporations, non-government organizations, associations, cooperatives, or single proprietorships who knowingly sell, lend, lease, assign, consent or allow the unauthorized use of their import permits for purposes of profiteering, hoarding, and cartelling.
Ejercito explained that “the difficulty of the country to cope with other countries in terms of food security is apparent in the rising prices of basic commodities and the scarcity and shortage of such.”
“Even President Bongbong Marcos recognized the widespread smuggling with his recent call for significant reforms in the bureaucracy to thwart and curtail the proliferation of the same.”
In the recent Economist’s 2021 Global Food Security Index (GFSI), the Philippines ranked 64th out of 113 countries in terms of four dimensions of food security: food availability, food accessibility, food utilization, and stability.
Meanwhile, in his SB No. 1812, Senator Lito Lapid seeks to amend the same anti-agri smuggling law to include tobacco and cigarettes in the list composed of essential food items like rice, onions, sugar, and meat, among others.