Who says state planning doesn't work?

 

REH

 

From: [email protected]
[mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Robert Stennett
Sent: Saturday, July 16, 2011 10:54 AM
To: EDUCATION RE-DESIGNING WORK INCOME DISTRIBUTION
Subject: [Futurework] China to Release More of Its Pork Reserves -
NYTimes.com

 

 

 

http://www.nytimes.com/2011/07/16/world/asia/16china.html?_r=1
<http://www.nytimes.com/2011/07/16/world/asia/16china.html?_r=1&hp> &hp

 


China Plans to Release Some of Its Pork Stockpile to Hold Down Prices


 
<http://graphics8.nytimes.com/images/2011/07/16/world/16china/16china-articl
eLarge.jpg> 

Qilai Shen/Bloomberg News

A food wholesale center near Shanghai. China said it would put more frozen
pork from its national reserves on the market. 


By MICHAEL WINES
<http://topics.nytimes.com/top/reference/timestopics/people/w/michael_wines/
index.html?inline=nyt-per> 


Published: July 15, 2011


BEIJING - Some nations have strategic oil reserves. Some keep grain
reserves. China
<http://topics.nytimes.com/top/news/international/countriesandterritories/ch
ina/index.html?inline=nyt-geo>  has both, and something others have somehow
overlooked: a national pork reserve. 

Enlarge This Image

 
<http://graphics8.nytimes.com/images/2011/07/16/world/CHINA-REFER/CHINA-REFE
R-articleInline.jpg> 


Agence France-Presse - Getty Images


A litter of piglets fed from their mother at a farm in Lanxi, China.  

And with the price of pig meat up 38 percent in major cities since the start
of the year, the government is about to open its floodgates. 

China's Commerce Ministry said Friday that it planned to release part of the
central government's 200,000-metric-ton stash of frozen pork onto the
market, following earlier releases from pork reserves held by cities and at
least 11 provinces trying to cap rising food prices
<http://topics.nytimes.com/top/reference/timestopics/subjects/f/food_prices/
index.html?inline=nyt-classifier> . 

So far, they have failed. Year-over-year inflation in China rose to 6.4
percent in June. The ministry says the price of pork in big cities soared by
17 percent last month alone, propelled by higher feed prices, rising wages
and increased demand. 

"As we know, pig breeding has experienced consecutive increases the last
three years," the ministry's spokesman, Yao Jian, said at a briefing on
Friday. "But with the progress of urbanization and increasing consumption of
pork by the people, market control faces new challenges on the quantity of
pork consumption." 

If a reliable supply of pig meat does not sound like a national priority,
consider this: pork makes up more than half the meat consumed in China, and
up to 70 percent in some areas, China's state-run CCTV television network
reported in May. 

As living standards and meat consumption have risen, the demand for pork has
jumped apace. The average Chinese consumer ate four times as much pork in
2007 as he did in the early 1990s, the English-language newspaper China
Daily reported at the time. While per-person consumption is still higher in
some nations like Denmark, the Chinese, over all, produce and eat more than
half the world's pigs. 

The crush of demand for pork has made the supply vulnerable to all sorts of
fluctuations, from epidemics of pig diseases to weather changes that affect
the price of grain that fattens pigs. But a nation that runs on pork cannot
afford to run short. So in 2007, the government decided to establish a
national pork reserve, reasoning that a backlog of frozen meat could be used
to make up for shortages and stabilize prices when necessary. 

In practice, a strategic pork reserve has problems. Frozen meat does not
keep for more than about four months, and live animals must be fed and
constantly replenished to keep the reserve stable. In Shaoxing, a large city
in coastal Zhejiang Province, the local government keeps a virtual reserve
of pork by paying farmers a subsidy of 20 renminbi per pig - about $3 - to
keep their herds at a set level. 

The government's latest plan to open the pork floodgates faces a different
problem: even at 200,000 metric tons, which is about 220,000 tons, the
reserve is too small to make a dent in demand, and so is unlikely to have a
big impact on rising prices. 

Not to worry, however. The National Development and Reform Committee,
China's powerful state planning agency, says prices will stabilize in the
second half of 2011, according to an interview in The 21st Century Business
Herald, a state-run daily newspaper. 

Li Bibo contributed research. 


A version of this article appeared in print on July 16, 2011, on page A4 of
the New York edition with the headline: China Plans to Release Some of Its
Pork Stockpile to Hold Down Prices.

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