Japan's rising rice prices spark food security concerns

By MG News | June 24, 2025 at 05:45 PM GMT+05:00
June 24, 2025 (MLN): Rice, a staple in Japanese and other Asian cuisines, is
putting pressure on consumers and politicians in Japan due to its rising price
amid declining production, prompting the country to evaluate its food security.
The average price of a 5-kilogram (11-pound) bag of rice
rose by more than 4,000 Japanese yen ($28) in May, a 98% increase year-on-year,
as fewer varieties of rice were available in the markets.
Global instability, the climate crisis, and small-scale farming practices pressure the rice market while weakening Japan’s bargaining hand against the US in tariff negotiations, as per APP.
Rice is facing a serious supply shortage, as its price has
doubled since last summer. Despite the Japanese government’s efforts to release
emergency reserves to lower prices, rice remains high amid declining production
and its perceived scarcity.
Japan’s traditional cuisine attaches great importance to
rice, but its production has been affected by recent climate events and natural
disasters. Low farm yields and the booming tourism sector in the country are
the main factors affecting rice prices.
Rising rice prices pushed inflation up, and Japan resorted
to importing rice from South Korea for the first time in years.
Japan has been struggling with disinflation for years; in
May, the country's inflation rate was 3.6%, higher than other developed
countries and well above the Bank of Japan's 2% target.
Rice prices began to rise alongside wheat prices following
the outbreak of the Russia-Ukraine war, which resulted in a supply shortage.
Meanwhile, the record-breaking hot summer of 2023 destroyed
the harvest, and a major earthquake warning in August last year sparked panic
buying and stockpiling of rice, resulting in another scarcity.
Rice stocks from the 2024 harvest were sold around two
months earlier than scheduled, and the wholesale price of rice increased by
more than 40% month-on-month in Sept. 2024, and prices have only continued to
rise since then due to ongoing supply shortages and increased demand.
Since 1972, the Japanese government has managed to control
rice production in the country, balancing supply and demand and encouraging
farmers to produce less when necessary, but the Japanese Ministry of
Agriculture underestimated this balance for 2023 and 2024.
People resumed their normal routines following the pandemic.
Tourists and the domestic population's eating habits boosted rice consumption
in the country.
Former Japanese Farm Minister Taku Eto resigned in May after
much backlash following his statements. Eto stated he has “never bought rice”
himself, as his “supporters give quite a lot of rice.”
“I have so much rice at home that I could sell it,” he said
amid the rice crisis in the country.
Eto apologized for the “extremely inappropriate remark” he
made and resigned on May 21.
Following these developments, rice became a focal point in
the next month’s elections.
Meanwhile, Shinjiro Koizumi replaced Eto as the Minister of
Agriculture, Forestry, and Fisheries.
The newly appointed 44-year-old is the second son of the
popular former Prime Minister Junichiro Koizumi.
On June 10, the minister announced that an additional
200,000 tons of rice from the 910,000-ton reserve would be released to help
stabilize rising prices, while 100,000 tons from the 2020 and 2021 harvests
would be made available in two batches.
According to Koizumi, a 5-kilogram bag of rice will cost
approximately 2,000 Japanese yen ($14) in stores.
The government decided not to sell rice to wholesalers
through an auction, instead selling it directly to retail chains at a fixed
price to ensure that consumer rice prices fall, sparking much debate over a
taboo decision.
The Bank of Japan (BoJ) is closely monitoring rice prices
right now, as the decline has prevented the bank from raising its low interest
rate and shrinking its balance sheet, which has grown to the size of the
Japanese economy.
The BoJ maintained its short-term policy rate at 0.5% on
Tuesday, within estimates. The rate has been the same since the last increase
in January.
Moreover, some experts believe the current rice crisis will
encourage the government to make concessions by increasing agricultural imports
and lowering non-tariff barriers, reducing the country's bargaining power in
trade talks with the US.
US President Donald Trump's sweeping reciprocal tariffs, which hit Japan at a 24% rate, were supplemented by 25% auto, steel, and aluminum tariffs.
Rice imports are important in the US-Japan trade negotiations, and if the talks fail, the country could face reciprocal tariffs of more than 24%, while Washington is pressuring Japan to import more US agricultural products, including rice.
Trump has been critical of Japan’s agricultural tariffs and
standards, such as prohibiting genetically modified imports into the country.
Trump wants to see tariff negotiations done by July 9, but
Japanese Prime Minister Shigeru Ishiba wants to postpone until the second half
of July, which is after the upcoming parliamentary elections, so as not to lose
votes in rural areas.
Japan imports around 770,000 tons of rice duty-free, half of
which is from the US.
While Japan’s geographical structure as an island makes it
difficult to cultivate agricultural products like wheat, crops like rice can
flourish.
However, most Japanese farmers work part-time on small plots
of land, and many of them are getting older, mirroring the country's aging
population, with younger people unwilling to take over agricultural family
businesses.
According to the Japanese Ministry of Agriculture, Forestry,
and Fisheries, roughly 90% of individual farms are run by farmers aged 60 and
up, with approximately 70% lacking successors.
The average age of Japanese farmers is 69, according to the
most recent data, and the number of farmers has decreased from 2.3 million in
2000 to around 1m, with individual farmers being replaced by large-scale
farmers and agricultural firms.
Rice fields fell from a peak of 3.4m hectares (13.1 square
miles) of land in 1961 to 2.3m hectares (8,880 square miles) in 2024, while the
number of households farming rice dropped from 4.66m in 1970 to 700,000 in
2020, according to Japanese media reports.
Masayuki Ogawa, an assistant professor of agricultural
economics at Utsunomiya University, told Anadolu that rice prices have been
high among wholesalers from the end of last year through May.
Ogawa said that when a product becomes more expensive,
consumption decreases; however, rice has a unique place in Japan as a staple
product, so consumers are willing to buy expensive rice because demand does not
decrease significantly.
He explained that the low-quality harvest, the sharp rise in
demand in 2023, and the issues of 2024 resulted in rice price increases, which
caused some supermarkets to stop selling.
He noted that rice prices in Japan are somewhat random due
to a lack of an established market, so the prices rise exponentially whenever
there is a disruption in supply.
He emphasized that the agriculture ministry's decision to
sell large amounts of rice from national reserves could be a move to gain
popularity ahead of next month's elections, noting that the battle to purchase
the 2025 harvest has already begun before harvesting starts.
He added that even if a large volume of rice is harvested this fall, rice prices may not fall significantly.
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