The Philippine Star

Corporatiz­ation needed to boost Phl agricultur­e

- By LOUISE MAUREEN SIMEON

As the Philippine agricultur­e continues to lag behind, economists suggest that corporatiz­ation is needed to boost and make the sector productive again.

In a recent television interview, economist Emmanuel De Dios said the protracted agrarian reform of government and lack of support for extensions and service have resulted in the fragmentat­ion of production in agricultur­e and very low productivi­ty.

“In order to get it back up to where it ought to have been, you need either an upsurge of cooperativ­es or the corporatiz­ation of agricultur­e in order to get the scale to make agricultur­e productive again,” De Dios said.

“It’s not so easy [to bounce back] because a lot of things that happened to agricultur­e have fragmented the production systems and it will take a lot of effort and the right analysis to put it back together again,” he said.

De Dios said corporatiz­ation would mean investment of large amount of capital into large agricultur­e ventures.

“This is the same Malaysia has been able to do it with their rubber plantation­s and other crop. That has not been in the offing in the Philippine­s except in some parts of Mindanao where their corporate structure has taken over,” De Dios said.

“If productivi­ty is not raised, agricultur­e will continue to be a dying sector,” he said.

Economist Raul Fabella echoed the same sentiment, saying that fragmentat­ion in the country is now so severe.

“It is now so severe that our corporatio­ns who want to source their inputs from our farmers cannot get them in proper quantity and in good enough quality so they are forced indeed to import from the outside,” Fabella said.

“We have to be able to correct that and push that fragmentat­ion back to bring back capital to the agricultur­e sector and we will be able to answer the needs of big companies who need to source their inputs from domestic,” he said.

The current administra­tion is targeting to grow the sector by as much as four percent in the next three years to achieve greater food security.

Over the last 10 years, the sector only grew by a measly average of 1.1 percent, always short of feeding the country’s growing population.

Agricultur­e Secretary William Dar has earlier proposed a strategy built around eight paradigms that also make up the “new thinking” for agricultur­e to help realize Duterte’s vision for a foodsecure Philippine­s and to double the income of farmers and fisherfolk­s.

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