The Philippine Star

Landbank makes lending easier for small farmers

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Dominador Ercilla has been a farmer almost all his life.

Being born into a family of farmers in San Jose, Nueva Ecija, he took the same road when he was forced to quit school after his second year in college due to poverty. He was hoping to get a degree in Agricultur­e at the then Central Luzon Agricultur­al College (now Central Luzon State University).

For almost 50 years now, Dominador has provided for his family with what he earns from rice farming in his fivehectar­e land in Brgy. A. Pascual in his hometown. By working on his plow from sunrise to sundown, he was able to send two of his three children through college who are now a nurse and a radiologic technologi­st.

However, it has not always been easy for Dominador. Just like other farmers, he had to go to private money lenders to augment his production budget every crop cycle.

The interest rates imposed by private money lenders were high but Dominador had to take it with his eyes closed because it was the only way he could finance his rice production. This changed when he was invited by their associatio­n president to a seminar at PhilRice – where he learned about Sikat Saka.

Launched in 2012, Sikat Saka is a credit program, implemente­d by Landbank with the Department of Agricultur­e (DA), which provides direct access to credit for small palay farmers who are members of Irrigators Associatio­ns.

The program is designed for palay farmers in the country, most of whom don’t have access to formal credit facilities and thus depend on informal lenders who charge exorbitant interest rates. The program is implemente­d in 45 major rice producing provinces in the country like Nueva Ecija.

In 2016, with additional funding for the program, Landbank expanded Sikat Saka to also cover small corn farmers in 11 major corn producing provinces in the country.

As of the first quarter, P4.7 billion in loans were released under the Sikat Saka program, benefittin­g a total of 13,465 farmer-borrowers in covered areas nationwide.

The Sikat Saka program has an interest rate of 15 percent annually for the first two crop cycles. This is further reduced by one percent for every succeeding cycle on loans fully paid on time, up to the eighth cycle.

The program also offers integrated support such as irrigation, training, market, extension and administra­tive services. The farmers are likewise trained on credit discipline and financial management to teach them how to save, pay loans on time, and better manage their finances.

Meanwhile, for non-palay and corn farmers who are not covered by Sikat Saka, Landbank has another program especially designed for non-agrarian reform benefi- ciary (ARB) small farmers and fishers in selected provinces in the country.

Implemente­d in partnershi­p with DA and the Agricultur­al Credit Policy Council, the Agricultur­e and Fisheries Financing Program (AFFP) is a flexible credit facility that provides agricultur­al loans to marginaliz­ed small farmers and fishers who are registered in the Registry System for Basic Sectors in Agricultur­e (RSBSA).

Total loan releases under AFFP in the first quarter of this year amounted to P363 million, which benefited 2,340 small farmers and fishers across the country.

The program is designed to further increase the productive capacity of small farmers and fishers in the priority provinces, raise their income, and contribute to the attainment of food self-sufficienc­y.

Among the priority provinces for AFFP implementa­tion are Abra, Apayao, Benguet, Batanes, Cagayan, Kalinga, Ifugao, Nueva Vizcaya, Masbate, Romblon, Ilocos Norte, Isabela, Aurora, Zambales, Mt. Province and Palawan.

Landbank likewise has a lending program for ARBs through their organizati­ons called the Agrarian Production Credit Program (APCP). Implemente­d with DA, Department of Agrarian Reform (DAR) and Department of Environmen­t and Natural Resources (DENR), APCP provides credit assistance to ARBs through their respective organizati­ons and support for their onfarm and off-farm activities, whether individual or communal projects. APCP helps prepare ARBOs to become credit conduits of the bank under the regular lending window.

As of March 2017, Landbank has so far released P4 billion in loans benefittin­g 43,583 farmers nationwide. Eligible projects under APCP include agricultur­al production (crop, livestock, poultry and fishery), agri-enterprise­s and agri-related livelihood projects.

These retail lending programs are only among the wide array of services offered by Landbank in keeping with its thrust to promote inclusive growth and sustainabl­e developmen­t, especially in the countrysid­e.

 ??  ?? Dominador Ercilla in his farm in San Jose Nueva Ecija.
Dominador Ercilla in his farm in San Jose Nueva Ecija.

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