The Manila Times

RECTO PUSHES MEASURE CONDONING CARP LOANS

- JAVIER JOE ISMAEL

SENATE President Pro Tempore Ralph Recto on Friday called for the early approval of his Senate Bill (SB) 268, which proposes condoning all the debts farmers incurred in owning lands under the government’s Comprehens­ive Agrarian Reform Program (CARP).

Recto made the appeal after approval by the House of Representa­tives on Wednesday of a bill that contains his proposal.

His bill seeks the write-off of all unpaid amortizati­ons, interest, penalties and surcharges on loans secured under CARP.

Once this mass amnesty of farmer’s obligation­s is approved by law, “the agrarian reform beneficiar­ies shall be deemed rightful owners of the lands awarded to them.”

“This is one Covid-response measure worth approving. If greater food production is what we should be doing to cushion the economic impact of the pandemic, then it is an incentive for those who feed us all,” he said.

“Emancipati­on from debt is what they also need,” Recto said.

He added that the total amount of land reform loans for forgivenes­s is small compared to the hundreds of billions in private sector loans that had been written off over the past 40 years.

“We have bailed out banks, paid for white elephant projects, amortized foreign loans of dubious benefits, lost money in bankrupt firms and entered into joint ventures which left us holding the bag,” Recto said.

He added that a succession of government­s has been generous to corporate deadbeats whose loans the government guaranteed and eventually assumed.

“We should extend the same considerat­ion to the farming poor,” the senator said, adding that the government has always been a “white knight” to many private corporatio­ns in distress.

Recto said condoning the loans will be a big load off farmer’s backs and also from offices that manage these receivable­s.

In one official report, only P2.5 billion of the P14.3 billion in amortizati­on for loans granted to awardees of CARP from 1987 to 2004 was paid.

Collection performanc­e by the Land Bank of the Philippine­s on CARP loans, on the other hand, was about 51 percent as of March 2015.

“There is a huge administra­tive cost in managing this important aspect of the agrarian reform program. In fact, in one study, the system to collect loan payments from CARP beneficiar­ies was not fully put in place due to the high costs required,” Recto explained.

While farmers’ debts will be condoned, landowners whose properties were subjected to land distributi­on will still be paid, he said.

“Their right to be paid on time and based on the legal contracts will be honored and will not be impaired,” Recto added.

His s bill limits the condonatio­n to CARP loans “and is not a 100 percent write-off of all agricultur­al debts, because if we will do the latter, then those who had maliciousl­y wasted millions in other programs will get a free pass.”

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