The Thai Cabinet approved a Natural Rubber Policy Panel proposal to shore up the price of para rubber to Bt120 per kilogramme, according to Deputy Government Spokesman Anusorn Iamsa-ard.

He said the Thai rubber price now stands at Bt107/kg. The price previously dropped to its lowest at Bt85/kg at the end of last year due to the global economic downturn, the Japanese tsunami and the Thai flood crisis that caused the suspension of automobile production.

The price reduction was caused by China buying less expensive Indonesian rubber and that investors made profits from selling their rubber contracts.
The price reduction was caused by China buying less expensive Indonesian rubber and that investors made profits from selling their rubber contracts. Picture: MCOT News

The Bank for Agriculture and Agricultural Cooperatives (BAAC) will offer interest-free loans of five billion baht to agricultural institutes including agricultural cooperatives and Bt10 billion to the Rubber Estate Organization, both under the Agriculture and Co-operatives Ministry.

Both organisations will buy rubber from producers for processing and wait for a good timing to sell it at an appropriate price. The government will compensate management costs to the BAAC. (MCOT online news)

via Cabinet approves shoring up natural rubber price to Bt120/kg.

About the author

Leave a Reply

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

Sign Up for Our Newsletter

Get notified of our weekly selection of news

You May Also Like

Retail, banking and tourism sectors expected to gain from election outcome

The Thai stock market is likely to remain volatile in the short term as investors await more clarity on the formation of the new government and its policy implementation. However, in the long term, analysts expect that a stable and democratic government will be positive for the Thai economy and market sentiment.

Thailand to export 700,000 tonnes of durian to China

The Ministry of Agriculture and Cooperatives expects Thailand to export no less than 700,000 tonnes of fresh durian to China during this year’s fruit harvest season

Food insecurity is threatening decades of development progress in Asia and the Pacific

The Russian invasion of Ukraine has disrupted supplies of food staples and fertilizer, straining a global food system already weakened by climate change impacts, pandemic-related supply shocks, and unsustainable farming practices.