PM Ismail Sabri: Govt intervention stabilises chicken prices, food supply

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Prime Minister Datuk Seri Ismail Sabri (centre) during the launch of the Malaysian Agriculture, Horticulture, and Agrotourism exhibition in Serdang August 6, 2022. — Malay Mail photo

SERDANG (Aug 6): The intervention measures taken by the government to ensure the security of food supply have paid off as chicken prices are now lower than the ceiling price of RM9.40 per kilogramme, said Prime Minister Datuk Seri Ismail Sabri Yaakob.

He said the intervention measures included abolishing the approved permit (AP), halting chicken exports and creating buffer stock for chicken and fish.

Through the measures, he said the government for the first time provided subsidies amounting to RM1.1 billion to chicken breeders to ease their burden as well as to ensure sufficient supply of chicken and eggs and guarantee price stability.

“These measures have shown success because today there is an oversupply of chicken and the prices are also lower than the ceiling price set by the government which is RM 9.40 per kilogramme,” he said when launching the 2022 Malaysia Agriculture, Horticulture and Agro Tourism Exhibition (MAHA 2022) here today.

Despite the disruption of the world’s food supply chain, Ismail Sabri said the government remained committed to managing the lack of food supply despite facing various constraints.

“The government is trying to deal with the manipulation of middlemen and cartels in the agriculture sector and the food supply chain which causes inflation and increase in the prices of goods,” he said.

Ismail Sabri said that yesterday, the Malaysia Competition Commission (MyCC) issued a Proposed Decision against five feedmillers for infringing Section 4 of the Competition Act 2010 and this should serve as a warning against cartels that tried to manipulate prices and the market.

He also wanted the Agriculture and Food Industries Ministry (MAFI) to continue the ‘jihad against middlemen’ through the supply chain control strategy in collaboration with the agencies under it such as establishing a paddy buying centre and fruit collection centre as well as adding farmer’s market and fisherman’s market.

“I once declared ’jihad against middlemen’ in 2014 when I headed the Ministry of Agriculture and Agro-based Industry because of the actions of middlemen who exploit farmers and fishermen by manipulating prices in the market,” he said.

In the 12th Malaysia Plan, the agro-food sector is expected to grow at a rate of 4.5 per cent per year, thus making the sector a major contributor to the gross domestic product, he added.

Ismail Sabri said the government had established a Cabinet Committee on National Food Security Policy to formulate a holistic food security policy and under the committee, the National Food Security Policy Action Plan 2021-2025 had been developed by taking into account food security issues and challenges.

Several trade, producer and consumer-oriented measures and strategies have been introduced by the government, among others, to reduce dependence on food imports which reached RM60 billion last year, he said.

He said the measures were also to attract foreign investors in the country’s agro-food sector projects as well as encourage the aggressive involvement of government agencies, government-linked companies (GLCs), government-linked investment companies (GLICs) and the private sector in the agenda to guarantee the country’s food security.

The government also ensures that the issue of national food security is always given attention through the Technical Committee to Address Issues of National Food Security and the Special Task Force on Jihad against Inflation, he said.

He added that Mafi, as the leader of the agro-food sector, needs to ensure that every plan and policy complement each other in order to boost the sustainability and resilience of the agro-food system. — Bernama