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Sprawling queues for subsidised rice highlight plight of Indonesia’s poor

Jakarta, Indonesia
Reuters

In the afternoon sun, dozens of Indonesians, mostly women, gather in a snaking queue to buy bags of subsidised rice, their arms poking through a metal gate to grab tickets assuring them a spot to make a purchase.

The temporary bazaar run by state food procurement agency Bulog in the city of Bekasi, 25 kilometres east of the capital Jakarta highlights the struggle of Indonesia’s less fortunate to buy the grain that is at the centre of nearly every meal in South-East Asia’s most populous country.


A worker carries a sack of rice at the warehouse in Jakarta, Indonesia, on 13th February, 2024. PICTURE: Reuters/Ajeng Dinar Ulfiana/File photo

A staple for most of Indonesia’s 270 million people, the price of rice has climbed more than 16 per cent since last year, as the El Nino weather phenomenon has cut rainfall across large parts of Asia in 2023, reducing cereal output and sparking food inflation pressure for some of the world’s most price-sensitive consumers.

Masih, a 55-year-old coconut vendor, was among those jostling to buy a five kilogram bag of rice.

“It’s better to queue up and have the rice at home. It is expensive in the market, so better to get it cheap here,” she told Reuters.

Rice prices at the bazaar are capped at 10,600 rupiah (67.8 US cents) per kilogram, compared with 14,300 rupiah in the open market. Bulog limits sales to 10 kilogram per customer to prevent hoarding.

The government typically steps in to sell food products at subsidised prices when prices climb.



Bulog has distributed more than 300,000 metric tons of rice from government reserves since January through hundreds of bazaars around the country, following reports of scarcity at other retail outlets.

The National Food Agency, which oversees Bulog, said it conducted 429 of the makeshift bazaars in January and plans 315 more by the end of February.

This year in Indonesia, planting delays and lack of rains have delayed the peak harvest by a month, with farm ministry data showing a rice supply deficit of 1.63 million metric tons in January and 1.15 million in February.

Indonesia, which imported record volumes of rice in 2023, has allocated an additional import quota of 1.6 million metric tons, on top of 2 million tons previously approved for 2024, potentially triggering further gains in global prices, which are near 16-year highs.

 – Additional reporting by BERNADETTE CHRISTINA and JOHAN PURNOMO

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