Vietnam: Vegetables have lost their value, farmers have no profit

Published 2024년 3월 1일

Tridge summary

Farmers in Tien Giang province are facing a 20-30% drop in vegetable prices compared to the previous year due to increased production in the Winter-Spring crop and an influx of vegetables from Da Lat and imports. Despite favorable weather and fresh produce, the low prices coupled with increased costs for water supply and fertilizers are causing farmers to struggle to make a profit, with some even selling their vegetables at a loss.
Disclaimer:The above summary was generated by Tridge's proprietary AI model for informational purposes.

Original content

At this time, most green vegetables in Tien Giang province have decreased in price by 20-30% compared to the same crop last year and halved compared to before the traditional Giap Thin Tet; Among them, the price of Bok choy has dropped the deepest, only ranging from 1,500 - 2,000 VND/kg, water spinach 3,000 VND/kg, pennywort, laksa leaves, chives around 5,000 VND/kg. There are times when farmers' vegetable fields reach the harvest stage and there are no traders coming to buy them, so they have to harvest them for cattle and fish to eat... Meanwhile, in dry times, the water source in irrigation canals gradually depleted, the cost of pumping water to supply vegetables increased, so farmers did not have high profits like previous years, and even grew many types of vegetables at a loss. According to traders, vegetable prices have dropped sharply due to increased output in the Winter-Spring crop and the large amount of vegetables from Da Lat and even imported vegetables, leading to ...
Source: Vov

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