A employee places konbu sea weed on rice on the riceball manufacturing line on the processing manufacturing facility of Fuji Meals Co., in Funabashi, Chiba, Japan, on Friday, Jan. 26, 2024. Riceballs are one of many 7-Eleven Japan’s most essential merchandise, with greater than 2 billion bought every year. Photographer: Noriko Hayashi/Bloomberg by way of Getty Photos
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After months of accelerating rice costs, Japanese customers could also be lastly getting some aid.
Information from Japan’s agriculture ministry revealed that the typical value of a five-kg bag of rice had fallen to three,920 yen ($27.03) for the week ending June 15, which marked the primary time that rice had fallen under the 4,000-yen mark for the reason that week that ended on March 2.
This was additionally the primary time that rice costs got here throughout the goal set by Prime Minister Shigeru Ishiba.
In Could, Ishiba promised to decrease costs, reportedly saying he believed that “rice costs must be within the 3,000-yen vary, since staying within the 4,000-yen vary cannot be proper.” Ishiba additionally reportedly instructed opposition lawmakers that he would take private accountability for the matter.
Rice has been a hot-button matter in Japan, with surging costs and shortages resulting in empty cabinets in supermarkets throughout the nation.
Careless feedback over rice had even value a minister his job. Japan’s former farm minister Taku Eto stepped down in Could, following public outrage over his feedback on getting free rice from supporters.
The rise [in rice prices] was very drastic this yr, possibly from March to April. So only a couple months in the past, they’ve been growing, each single day, possibly a pair hundred yen, each single day.
Rice costs in Japan rose sharply within the second half of 2024 — on the again of poor harvests in 2023 and an outsized demand from vacationers — and accelerated additional within the first half of this yr.
Yoichi Ryu, a 26-year-old Tokyo resident, instructed CNBC on Friday that the spike in rice costs was stark.
He recounted {that a} five-kilo bag of ice value about 1,800 yen to 2,000 yen two years in the past, however costs have greater than doubled to between 4,500 and 5,000 yen.
“The rise was very drastic this yr, possibly from March to April. So only a couple months in the past, they’ve been growing each single day, possibly a pair hundred yen, each single day,” he added.
Authorities knowledge revealed that rice costs had greater than doubled in Could, skyrocketing by 101.7% and marking the most important enhance in over half a century.
Scarcity easing, however inconsistently
Nevertheless, it appears that there’s some mild on the finish of the tunnel for Japan’s rice scarcity. In addition to the discharge of presidency rice reserves, retailers have been providing rice imported from abroad, such because the U.S. and South Korea.
Grocery store Aeon began promoting California-sourced rice on June 6, saying that the choice was made amid low home rice provides in Japan.
In April, Japan imported rice from South Korea for the primary time since 1999, Bloomberg stated. South Korean meals export firm The O International was additionally reported to have signed an settlement in Could to export 200 tons of South Korean rice to assist ease Japan’s provide scarcity.
The contract represents the most important quantity of rice ever exported by a personal South Korean firm for normal client gross sales in Japan, the Korea Occasions reported.
In response to queries from CNBC, Japan’s Nationwide Grocery store Affiliation stated that the scarcity in Japan seems to be easing “due to the discharge of presidency rice stockpiles.”
However provide restoration has been uneven, with rice scarcity persisting in some locations. Roy Larke, professor of Japan enterprise at Tokyo-based intelligence agency JapanConsulting.com, instructed CNBC that some supermarkets round Tokyo nonetheless have empty rice shows, however these are small shops.
He added that “some chains aren’t having an issue and that some regional shops do have rice.”
Yoichi stated, “I bear in mind just lately, I’ve gone to [the] grocery store to purchase rice to restock, however I could not purchase them as a result of they only weren’t there, however their value tags have been nonetheless current.”
Costs stay excessive amid high quality issues
Regardless of rice making a comeback, costs nonetheless stay excessive. The Nationwide Grocery store Affiliation stated that there’s “no inventory of cheap rice.” Many shops appear to have unsold high-priced rice, it added.
Larke highlighted there could also be different causes for this, noting that “a month on from the federal government releasing stockpiles, costs of branded rice have solely simply begun to dip and, it at present appears, solely barely to this point.”
When Japan’s authorities launched its emergency stockpiles, it had bought rice on to retailers, aiming to get these shares to customers at 2,000 yen per sack.
“The truth that wholesale, branded rice costs took a month to start to say no and are nonetheless above the federal government’s goal [of 2,000 yen per 5kg bag] means that it might be greater than only a provide and demand challenge,” Larke stated.
Many customers are involved that the stockpiled rice is previous and never as tasty, he added.
Yoichi echoed the identical sentiment, saying that the federal government’s grain inventory is of poorer high quality in comparison with newly harvested shares of rice.
In Japan, newly harvested rice is marketed as “shinmai”, actually new rice, and is perceived to style higher. There’s even a authorized requirement that solely rice packaged by December 31 of that yr is allowed to be labelled as “shinmai.”
After the subsequent yr’s harvest, the present crop shall be often called “komai,” or previous rice. The federal government reserves come from older crops, and phrases like “ko-ko-komai” (actually, old-old-old rice) are getting used to explain the 2021 crop.
Statements from Japan’s central financial institution officers indicated that whereas they’re keeping track of rice costs, such sharp will increase are more likely to ease going ahead.
BOJ governor Kazuo Ueda stated in a press convention after the central financial institution’s June assembly that “once we take a look at latest knowledge, client inflation is transferring round 3%. However that is principally attributable to rising import prices and rice costs … we anticipate such pressures to dissipate,” in response to feedback translated by Reuters.