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India becomes leading supplier of rice to Singapore

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SINGAPORE: India has overtaken Thailand as Singapore's biggest rice supplier for the first time, exporting 92,865 tonnes or 32.9% of the total rice supply to the island nation in the first eight months of 2013.

Thailand shipped 85,816 tonnes or 30.4 per cent during the January-August period of this year to Singapore, reported The Straits Times on Saturday.

Vietnam supplied 77,459 tonnes or 27.4 per cent of rice supply during the period.

Indian rice exports to Singapore had risen to 29.5% last year from 15.3% in 2009.

Thailand has been the leading rice supplier to Singapore since 1998, accounting for over half of the total rice consumption of the city state between 1998 and 2011.

But its market share fell to 35.3% last year while supplies from India and other countries have increased.

"Importers (are) taking advantage of the lower prices of Indian rice compared to Thai rice," the daily quoted a trade and industry ministry spokesman.

The Singapore General Rice Importers Association said the shift in sourcing rice started when global rice prices began surging in 2008.

Other rice producing countries have also curbed exports to ensure sufficient domestic supplies while Thai crops have been hit by massive floods in the past.

Other rice suppliers to Singapore include Myanmar (2.5%), Pakistan (2.4%), the United States (2.2%), Cambodia (0.9%) and Australia (0.6%) as well as others (0.7%).

India becomes leading rice supplier to Singapore - The Times of India
 
śūnya_0_Zero;4863621 said:
Both yes.

now, can china feed its own people?

see below for clue :

Farm size and productivity

China continues to have a much lower size of landholding than India but its agricultural productivity and growth are significantly higher. Between 2000 and 2009, China recorded a 4.4% annual growth in GDP agriculture compared to 2.9% in India. Per hectare productivity of major crops in China is 6-190% higher than India. Similarly, China’s productivity in all the crops except soybean is much higher than the average productivity in the world. China also has a high concentration of workforce in agriculture, like India, but this has not come in the way of improving the livelihood of smallholders and the rural population. The country has reduced the level of poverty (based on the World Bank measure of per day income of $1.25 in terms of PPP 2005) from 84.0% to 15.9% between 1981-2005. Compared to China, India’s record in reducing poverty has been dismal. The incidence of poverty in India in the year 1980 based on the norm of $1.25 per day per person income was much lower than China (59.8%) but in the next 25 years India’s poverty level turned out to be much higher than China.
 
Conratz!!!

PS: Post these kind of threads in Indian Economy Sticky
 

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