No menu items!

COSTA RICA'S LEADING ENGLISH LANGUAGE NEWSPAPER

HomeArchiveGov’t to Import U.S. Beans To Lower Local Prices

Gov’t to Import U.S. Beans To Lower Local Prices

MANAGUA – The government announced Nov. 8 that it will buy 3,000 tons of red beans from the United States to lower the price for the product in the domestic market, where beans are selling for up to $1.22 per pound – more than double the normal price.

Ariel Bucardo, who heads the Ministry of Agriculture and Forestry (MAGFOR), said that Managua will buy the beans in the United States “to guarantee sufficient supply” in the domestic market and to “make an impact on lowering prices.”

He said that the government also will buy beans from local producers at a “fair price” and would stockpile them in the silos of the state-owned Nicaragua Basic Food Business (ENABAS), to have a “sufficient reserve to supply the internal market.”

Critics of the government have argued that the administration is not playing a great enough role in the market to regulate food prices on basic items such as beans, allowing prices to soar to nearly double the normal average (NT, Nov. 2).

President Daniel Ortega said that the ENABAS silos have the capacity to store 100 times the quantity of beans to be purchased, adding that the measure is intended to eliminate price speculation for the staple product.

“Those who are speculating whether there will be that product (available in the future) are going to have to sell at a much lower price,” he said, referring to sellers who were hoarding beans in anticipation of continued rising prices due to crop shortages.

“We’re going to fight (the hoarders) with their own weapon. They’re challenging us, and so the doors will not remain open any longer” to the international market for them, he added.

Ortega said that local producers would be offered a “fair price,” which he did not specify, so that they would not sell their product abroad and would not go bankrupt.

Bucardo, meanwhile, said that a private Nicaraguan firm will also import beans from the United States.

To help alleviate the food-price crisis, Taiwan announced it will donate 5,300 tons of rice to Nicaragua. Bucardo said that the first 300 tons will arrive Nov. 19 and “later, 5,000 more tons will arrive.”

He noted that the Taiwanese donation is intended to support the Nicaraguan families affected by Hurricane Felix and the intense rains that fell for 52 days in the Central American country.

“With that, we’re guaranteeing the supply of basic grain foods, mainly gallo pinto (beans mixed with rice), for Nicaraguans,” Bucardo said.

The Nicaraguan government has proposed lowering the price of a pound of beans from $1.22 to $0.42 over the next two months.

 

Trending Now

Wimbledon 2026 Draw Sets Tough Paths for Fonseca, Cerúndolo and Maia

Wimbledon’s 2026 draw gave Latin tennis a little bit of everything Friday: opportunity, danger, star power and one major absence. Brazil’s João Fonseca and...

Inside the Pecho de Rata Fortune and a Trunk Full of Cash

In his own recorded telling, it played out like a doting grandfather's anecdote. Edwin López Vega — the alleged narcotrafficking kingpin known across the...

Costa Rica Rounds Bus, Taxi and Toll Fares as the ₡5 Coin Exits

Hundreds of bus fares, along with selected taxi, train and toll charges, will shift up or down by a few colones starting July 1,...

Latin American Players Bring New Grass-Court Momentum Into Wimbledon

Francisco Cerúndolo has given Latin American tennis its clearest grass-court statement of the summer, turning a historic Queen’s Club title into a broader Wimbledon...

Costa Rica Warns Wildlife Trafficking Is Becoming Organized Crime

Costa Rica’s environmental prosecutors are warning that wildlife trafficking is no longer just a scattered problem of people capturing animals for pets or private...

Costa Rica Sends Rescue Mission to Venezuela After Devastating Earthquakes

Costa Rica has sent a rescue and humanitarian mission to Venezuela after two powerful earthquakes left widespread damage, collapsed buildings and an urgent need...

Long Lines Hit Costa Rica Airport After Midday Flight Surge

Long lines formed Saturday at the departure immigration area of Juan Santamaría International Airport after a heavy midday wave of flights pushed thousands of...

Why the 2026 World Cup Feels Strange Without La Sele

It is still hard to believe that, even with the gift of an expanded 48-team field, I am watching only the second World Cup...

Venezuelan Police Officers Arrested for Stealing After Deadly Earthquakes

Four Venezuelan investigative police officers have been arrested and removed from their posts after allegedly stealing money found among the rubble in La Guaira,...
Avatar
🌴 The Weekly Pura Vida

Costa Rica, Once a Week

The week's top stories, weather & insider tips — delivered every Sunday. One email, zero clutter.

🔒 Free. No spam. Unsubscribe anytime.

Loading…

Latest News from Costa Rica

Costa Rica Coffee Maker Chorreador
Costa Rica Car Rentals
Costa Rica Travel Insurance
Costa Rica Travel