The price of another staple is coming down.
Days after two of the country’s flour producers announced a drop in the price of flour products, JMH Enterprises Ltd has reduced the price of the Par Excellence rice by 10 per cent.
In a news release, JMH said, “Like flour, rice is also a staple food that had been previously affected by rising global freight and commodity prices. However, without adjusting our product sizes, we are offering lower prices for the same great quality Par Excellence rice that our customers love.”
The company continued, “We know that this development will be welcomed as it offers respite to our customers who have been grappling with inflation and stretched budgets.
This reduction in the price of rice will provide a measure of financial relief to households. It will help families in meeting their basic nutritional requirements without putting pressure on their pockets. JMH Enterprises Ltd remains committed to providing high quality rice that is affordable to all.”
Contacted for comment, owner of JMH Enterprises, Christopher James, said he is able to reduce the retail price of the rice he sells because of the reduction in shipping rates.
He added that the price of rice in Brazil and Uruguay—from where he imports the parboiled rice he sells on the local market—has returned to pre-COVID-19 levels.
James said he figures that JMH Enterprises supplies about 35 per cent of the parboiled rice consumed in T&T.
Last Monday, Nutrimix announced that its price reduction would range from 10 per cent to 13 per cent on its two kilogramme (kg) flour and 10 per cent to 12 per cent on its 10kg size, while there will be an imminent price reduction on it range of 45 kg products.
A day later, flour company Sheik Lisha Ltd confirmed that it would be reducing its products by 10 per cent next week while National Flour Mills chief executive officer Ian Mitchell said the state-owned company had been mulling over a price reduction that would ensure stability for customers.
On Wednesday, Minister of Trade and Industry Paula Gopee-Scoon urged and expected more companies to follow the lead of Nutrimix as her ministry had seen a consistent decline in the Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) of the United Nations’ benchmark index of international food commodity prices.
On Friday, the FAO published its Food Price Index for June 2023, which indicated that global prices for cereals had declined by 23.87 per cent between June 2022 and June 2023.
The FAO Cereals Price Index comprises global prices for wheat, maize, sorghum and rice.
The FAO’s Food Price Index–which measures price movements in five commodity groups comprising meat, dairy, cereals vegetable oils and sugar–declined by 20.94 per cent between June 2022 and June 2023.
However the FAO warned that high food prices had worsened the food situation in vulnerable countries as it noted, “High food prices, economic downturns, conflict, droughts and the impending risk of El Niño weather patterns in several regions are aggravating food security concerns in many parts of the world.”