Gov’t might lift milk price cap

The State should eliminate price ceilings for milk products and control milk prices via input materials instead, experts said.

Price ceilings were put in place in May 2014 by the Ministry of Finance. At the end of the second quarter of 2015, the ministry extended the price ceiling through the end of this year.

The Ministry of Finance’s Pricing Management Department said after stabilising milk prices, the prices dropped by between 0.1% and 34% for milk products for under six year-olds.

Nguyen Anh Tuan, director of Ministry of Finance’s Price Management Department, told Tin tuc (News) newspaper early this week that the price ceiling would be effective until the end of this year and then the ministry would review the price ceilings.

Nguyen Thi Xuan, a Hanoi resident, said the current price for a 900g can of Nan milk is VND340,000, while it was VND400,000 before the price ceiling was enforced.

She worried that if the State eliminated the price ceiling the price of milk products for children would increase again.

Meanwhile, Phuong Thao, owner of a milk shop in Ho Chi Minh City said before the price ceilings, milk producers and distributors had adjusted their prices according to supply and demand on the market and explained the reasons for the adjustments.

Since the price ceiling was enacted, companies had offered less discounts and promotions for agencies and customers when they adjusted milk prices, she said.

Vu Ngoc Quynh, general secretary of the Vietnam Dairy Association, said in the short term, buyers have enjoyed lower prices thanks to the price ceiling.

But in the mid and long term, the mechanism would hinder the development of milk products and reduce competition among producers, said Quynh.

Price expert Ngo Tri Long said the mechanism discouraged companies from investing in production of new products and gave no incentive to improve product quality. That also made the companies unable to compete at home and abroad.

The State should abolish the price ceilings and let the market decide the prices, Long said. To control milk prices without the price ceiling, the State should manage the import of materials for the production of milk products by using the tax and customs policies.

He also said that it would be difficult to increase the prices of milk products for under six year-olds after eliminating the price ceiling because dairy companies must register the new prices and get approval from the State to adjust their prices.

Nutrition and Food Group under Eurocham represented six foreign multi-national dairy companies in Vietnam proposing that the State should remove the price ceiling and use the market to determine prices.

To ensure cheap milk powder products, the State should reduce import tax and value-added tax for the components of these products. The import tax for milk is 5% for products from ASEAN and 10% for products from other countries.

Mời quý độc giả theo dõi VOV.VN trên

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Vietnam to consider removal of ceiling milk price
Vietnam to consider removal of ceiling milk price

Minister of Finance Dinh Tien Dung said Vietnam would consider the removal of the ceiling price for dairy products for children aged under six from July, 2016. 

Vietnam to consider removal of ceiling milk price

Vietnam to consider removal of ceiling milk price

Minister of Finance Dinh Tien Dung said Vietnam would consider the removal of the ceiling price for dairy products for children aged under six from July, 2016.