[Agriculture and rural areas must work together to survive] "We must organize farming households centered around items and gain the power to determine prices"

Published 2025년 12월 30일

Tridge summary

[Korea Farmers' News Agency, Reporter Kim Kyung-uk] To ensure that agricultural products receive their fair value, the structure that prevents producers from deciding prices themselves must be changed. Experts suggest that in order to achieve this, farms need to be organized and price-setting power must be gained through joint distribution and joint processing. Professor Yang Seok-jun from Sangmyung University stated, "Connecting producers and consumers online can reduce costs." Professor Yang identified the root of the agricultural distribution problem as "the structure where only in agriculture, producers cannot decide prices." He explained, "Electronics companies set their own prices for mobile phones, but in agriculture, farms cannot set prices." He continued, "The prices of numerous farms are determined by a few distribution companies.

Original content

To ensure agricultural products receive their fair price, the structure that prevents producers from deciding prices themselves must be changed. Experts suggest that this requires organizing farms and gaining pricing power through joint distribution and processing. Professor Yang Seok-joon from Sangmyung University pointed out that the root of the agricultural distribution problem lies in the structure where only agriculture allows producers to not decide prices. He noted that while electronic companies set their own prices for cell phones, farms cannot set prices. He pointed out that the structure where prices are determined by a few distributors for many farms cannot be anything but unfavorable for farmers. Professor Yang emphasized that it is impossible for individual farms to decide prices and that organization is a prerequisite. He diagnosed that the structure where farms cannot receive fair prices, consumers feel prices are high, and price fluctuations are excessively large ...
Source: Agrinet

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