The Chinese onion market is in full swing: The government of South Korea continue to follow the supply and demand manual

Published 2023년 6월 20일

Tridge summary

The article highlights the dissatisfaction among domestic onion producers and distributors in South Korea towards the government's decision to import and release large quantities of Chinese onions, which has led to a significant drop in domestic onion prices. Critics argue that this move undermines the government's own supply and demand control manual and ignores the increased production costs faced by farmers. There are concerns about the potential negative impact on domestic farmers and cooperatives, especially with the possibility of further large-scale imports through the low tariff quota (TRQ). The government defends its actions as a necessary response to high prices, but is facing calls for a reevaluation of its agricultural policy and market intervention strategies.
Disclaimer:The above summary was generated by Tridge's proprietary AI model for informational purposes.

Original content

While the middle-late harvest is in full swing in major onion producing areas across the country, producers and distributors are dissatisfied with the government intentionally inducing a price drop while releasing imported Chinese onions to the wholesale market. In particular, as the manual for supply and demand control of agricultural products continues to release imported onions even though it is not in a crisis stage, criticism is raised that the government has set out to set prices for unreasonable domestic agricultural products under the pretext of price stability. Domestic onion prices, which continued to rise earlier this year, have recently continued to decline. On the 16th, at Garak Market in Seoul, onions were traded at an average of 1,073 won per 1 kg product. This is 20.2% lower than last year (1344 won). Onion prices showed stronger than last year, fluctuating between 1,400 and 1,600 won between January and March this year due to the lack of inventory from last year. ...
Source: Nongmin

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