Monitoring the agri-food system in Myanmar: Rice millers – March 2022 survey round

In March 2022, we interviewed more than 540 active rice millers to assess business disruptions and price changes at the midstream of Myanmar’s most important agricultural value chain. Key findings: Electricity and fuel disruptions were cited as the largest disruption for more than 80% of millers in...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Myanmar Agriculture Policy Support Activity
Format: Brief
Language:Inglés
Published: International Food Policy Research Institute 2022
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/140959
_version_ 1855530624384761856
author Myanmar Agriculture Policy Support Activity
author_browse Myanmar Agriculture Policy Support Activity
author_facet Myanmar Agriculture Policy Support Activity
author_sort Myanmar Agriculture Policy Support Activity
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description In March 2022, we interviewed more than 540 active rice millers to assess business disruptions and price changes at the midstream of Myanmar’s most important agricultural value chain. Key findings: Electricity and fuel disruptions were cited as the largest disruption for more than 80% of millers in March 2022, overtaking banking disruptions which had been the largest challenge in each survey round since early 2021. Transport and fuel cost increases are also significant difficulties for modern mills. Diesel prices have more than doubled from a year ago. Paddy and rice prices were higher in March 2022 than one year prior. For Emata varieties, paddy prices increased by 14 percent and milled rice prices increased by 8 percent. However, milling margins are stable, suggesting that millers are not contributing to the escalating consumer rice prices. Total monsoon harvest season throughput declined by 15 percent on average compared to a year ago. The leading factor is likely households withholding more rice and marketing smaller volumes, though reduced milling time from electricity cuts and diesel shortages also contribute. Lower throughput and constant margins imply lower overall profitability reflected in lower average operating capital. Lower profits and heightened uncertainty over the last two years have also contributed to a sharp decline in machinery investments. Looking forward: Increasing fuel and transport costs increase distribution margins and raise consumer prices. Electricity shortages or unpredictable shutoffs for modern mills could put further upward pressure on prices by restricting the marketed supply of rice. There is a high degree of uncertainty about rice exports from the recent foreign exchange policy changes including a fixed kyat conversion rate. Access to export markets can help stabilize prices in an otherwise turbulent economy. Further, with declining miller profits, byproduct markets become even more important for financial viability and a large volume of broken rice is exported. Therefore, potential disruptions to rice exports could have adverse effects on the rice value chain. The low investment in machinery in recent years not only suggests stalled growth in the rice milling sector but also some depreciation of equipment without replacement.
format Brief
id CGSpace140959
institution CGIAR Consortium
language Inglés
publishDate 2022
publishDateRange 2022
publishDateSort 2022
publisher International Food Policy Research Institute
publisherStr International Food Policy Research Institute
record_format dspace
spelling CGSpace1409592025-12-08T10:11:39Z Monitoring the agri-food system in Myanmar: Rice millers – March 2022 survey round Myanmar Agriculture Policy Support Activity value chains covid-19 rice interviews agrifood systems In March 2022, we interviewed more than 540 active rice millers to assess business disruptions and price changes at the midstream of Myanmar’s most important agricultural value chain. Key findings: Electricity and fuel disruptions were cited as the largest disruption for more than 80% of millers in March 2022, overtaking banking disruptions which had been the largest challenge in each survey round since early 2021. Transport and fuel cost increases are also significant difficulties for modern mills. Diesel prices have more than doubled from a year ago. Paddy and rice prices were higher in March 2022 than one year prior. For Emata varieties, paddy prices increased by 14 percent and milled rice prices increased by 8 percent. However, milling margins are stable, suggesting that millers are not contributing to the escalating consumer rice prices. Total monsoon harvest season throughput declined by 15 percent on average compared to a year ago. The leading factor is likely households withholding more rice and marketing smaller volumes, though reduced milling time from electricity cuts and diesel shortages also contribute. Lower throughput and constant margins imply lower overall profitability reflected in lower average operating capital. Lower profits and heightened uncertainty over the last two years have also contributed to a sharp decline in machinery investments. Looking forward: Increasing fuel and transport costs increase distribution margins and raise consumer prices. Electricity shortages or unpredictable shutoffs for modern mills could put further upward pressure on prices by restricting the marketed supply of rice. There is a high degree of uncertainty about rice exports from the recent foreign exchange policy changes including a fixed kyat conversion rate. Access to export markets can help stabilize prices in an otherwise turbulent economy. Further, with declining miller profits, byproduct markets become even more important for financial viability and a large volume of broken rice is exported. Therefore, potential disruptions to rice exports could have adverse effects on the rice value chain. The low investment in machinery in recent years not only suggests stalled growth in the rice milling sector but also some depreciation of equipment without replacement. 2022-06-07 2024-04-12T13:36:57Z 2024-04-12T13:36:57Z Brief https://hdl.handle.net/10568/140959 en Open Access application/pdf International Food Policy Research Institute Myanmar Agriculture Policy Support Activity (MAPSA). 2022. Monitoring the agri-food system in Myanmar: Rice millers – March 2022 survey round. Myanmar SSP Research Note 80. Washington, DC: International Food Policy Research Institute (IFPRI). https://doi.org/10.2499/p15738coll2.135933.
spellingShingle value chains
covid-19
rice
interviews
agrifood systems
Myanmar Agriculture Policy Support Activity
Monitoring the agri-food system in Myanmar: Rice millers – March 2022 survey round
title Monitoring the agri-food system in Myanmar: Rice millers – March 2022 survey round
title_full Monitoring the agri-food system in Myanmar: Rice millers – March 2022 survey round
title_fullStr Monitoring the agri-food system in Myanmar: Rice millers – March 2022 survey round
title_full_unstemmed Monitoring the agri-food system in Myanmar: Rice millers – March 2022 survey round
title_short Monitoring the agri-food system in Myanmar: Rice millers – March 2022 survey round
title_sort monitoring the agri food system in myanmar rice millers march 2022 survey round
topic value chains
covid-19
rice
interviews
agrifood systems
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/140959
work_keys_str_mv AT myanmaragriculturepolicysupportactivity monitoringtheagrifoodsysteminmyanmarricemillersmarch2022surveyround