Most of the Chinese buyers are intermediary merchants who collect fruits irregularly. The exports will be more stable only if Vietnamese exporters can approach Chinese businessmen who distribute products directly to consumers. |
Chinese merchants often stop importing fruit, leaving farm produce unsold.
Therefore, ministries and branches have to call on domestic consumers to buy
the unsold products to rescue farmers who have produced bananas, dragon
fruit, water melon and pork.
Local newspapers have shown images of trucks laden with fruits getting stuck
at the border gates as China was importing products in limited quantities.
Nigel Smith, CEO of Fine Fruit Asia, said at a workshop held several days
ago that it is the heavy reliance on one product and one market which has
affected Vietnam’s agriculture.
Meanwhile, the domestic market is not well organized, with big problems in
the distribution channel. This is why farmers have to sell pigs at very low
prices while consumers have to buy pork at high prices.
Households, which organize production on a small scale, remain the major
production force in Vietnam’s agriculture. This leads to unstable relations
between producers and exporters. As a result, exporters mostly target
markets which set low requirements instead of choosy markets such as Japan,
the US and Europe.
According to Le Van Duc from MARD, temperate countries such as China, South
Korea and Japan have crops from spring to September, so the ministry has
advised farmers to harvest products from October to March. However, as
farmers develop crops, they also harvest farm produce at a time when Chinese
farmers have their crops, thus leading to an oversupply.
MARD has asked Binh Thuan province, which is the ‘dragon fruit metropolis’,
to work with some other localities, to discuss the solutions of growing
dragon fruit at different times to avoid massive harvesting and oversupply.
In the long term, he said Vietnamese farmers need to improve the quality of
their farm produce so they can enter choosy markets. - VietNamNet Bridge