Wholesalers May Be behind Elevated Retail Rice Prices
Tokyo, May 17 (Jiji Press)--Larger gaps between wholesalers' procurement and selling prices, which represent their costs and profits, may be a factor behind the current elevated retail rice prices in Japan, a government survey has suggested.
According to the survey by the agriculture ministry between March 17 and April 13, buyers of government-stockpiled rice sold it to wholesalers at prices that were 961 yen per 60 kilograms higher on average than their purchase prices. Such gaps were up to 2,400 yen in a previous survey for ordinary rice harvested in 2022.
Meanwhile, wholesalers added 7,593 yen on average to their selling prices for stockpiled rice, far more than the 2,206 to 4,689 yen added for the 2022 rice.
While this is believed to partly reflect higher costs, agriculture minister Taku Eto said in a press conference on Friday, "We want (wholesalers) to understand that (sales of stockpiled rice) are different from deals on ordinary rice and to make utmost efforts (to lower retail rice prices)."
On the same day, the ministry set up a 60,000-ton quota in auctions for stockpiled rice for bidders planning to deliver the rice to retailers within one month. Under the quota, 20,000 tons will be available to bidders who plan to sell the rice directly to retailers.
(2025/05/17-17:46)