This is the VOA Special English Agriculture Report, from
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A United Nations
report predicts that world rice production will be higher this year than last
year. The report is from the Food and Agriculture Organization. The FAO says the
global rice harvest should be almost two percent higher this year, mainly
because of increased production in Asia. Large gains are expected in Bangladesh,
Burma, China, India, Pakistan, the Philippines and Thailand.Also, the FAO
predicts a recovery for rice harvests in Africa. Production increases are
expected to be led by Mali, Nigeria and Senegal. In other parts of the world,
the report predicts that rice harvests will be lower in the European Union and
the United States. Two reasons for this are unusually dry weather and falling
rice prices, which have led some farmers to plant other crops. Smaller rice
harvests also are expected in Latin America and the Caribbean. Concepcion Calpe
is an economist with the FAO. She says good harvests in Asia will lead to
reduced demand in the global rice trade this year. Demand in global trade is
expected to fall nine hundred thousand tons to about thirty-four million metric
tons. Ms. Calpe says one reason is because a lot of the major importers, like
Indonesia or the Philippines, or even Bangladesh, have harvested very good
crops. Another reason is because some of them, like the Philippines, have set
limits on how much they are willing to import. The FAO says prices for rice have
stayed high for several reasons. These include higher costs for fuel, fertilizer
and, in some areas, labor. One country where prices remain high is China.
Concepcion Calpe says the high prices raise questions about official Chinese
reports of record harvests.In Thailand, a government price-support program has
led rice exports to fall by twenty percent, to less than eight million tons. The
program keeps prices for Thai rice exports above market prices. As a result, the
FAO says exporters like Australia, India and Vietnam have captured a larger
market share.Ms. Calpe notes that Burma could become a major exporter of rice.
Many Western governments have eased trade restrictions on Burma recently because
of its efforts at political and economic reform. Foreign investment and
increased productivity in Cambodia might also help that country export more
rice.For VOA Special English, I'm Alex Villarreal.You can read, listen and learn
English with more news about agriculture at voaspecialenglish.com. (Adapted from
a radio program broadcast 15May2012)
원문출처 : http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Xa3RDOjmOA4&feature=youtube_gdata