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Vegetable shortage continue to push prices upward

Vegetable shortage continue to push prices upward
Author: VNS
Publish date: Tuesday. June 9th, 2020

Ho Chi Minh City –  Vegetable prices have been surging in HCM City as farmers reduce production due to the Covid-19 pandemic and costs increase because of saltwater intrusion in rivers in the Mekong Delta.

The prices of vegetables will continue to rise because of dwindling  supply, Lê Thanh Tùng, director of the Phước Bình Agricultural Production Service and Trading Cooperative in HCM City said.

Trần Thị Hiền, a trader at Phạm Văn Hai Market in HCM City’s Tân Bình District, said vegetable prices had been increasing by 5-10 per cent a day this month and tomato cost VNĐ35,000 (US$1.5) per kilogramme, cilantro, VNĐ55,000 (US$2.3) and broccoli, VNĐ30,000(US$1.3).

"The prices are 50-100 per cent up from early this month and two to four times the prices early this year," Hiền said.

Lê Thanh Tùng, director of the Phước Bình Agricultural Production Service and Trading Cooperative in HCM City’s Bình Chánh District, said following the outbreak of Covid-19 farmers were afraid there would be no demand and so did not sow vegetables.

As if to worsen their fears, vegetables became very cheap early this month after the Government ordered all restaurants to temporarily close to support social distancing, he said.

“I had to sell off and even give free to charity places. At some places they refused to take because they had too much.”

Meanwhile, in places like Tiền Giang Province in the delta, the saltwater intrusion means farmers have to buy water from other provinces.

Afraid this would push the cost of growing vegetables too high and cause losses, farmers stopped growing, Tùng added.

The situation is similar in other provinces such as An Giang and Long An, and vegetable output has fallen by 70 per cent.

Normally Tùng's co-operative buys around 10 tonnes of vegetables daily to retail, but now it can get only two tonnes at two to four times the normal prices.

With the unfavourable weather and continuing pandemic, the prices of vegetables are expected to keep rising.


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