The Philippine Star

WB OKs $370-M land title facilitati­on loan

- By CATHERINE TALAVERA

The World Bank Group has approved a $370 million loan for the Department of Agrarian Reform (DAR)’s Support to Parcelizat­ion of Lands for Individual Titling Project (SPLIT), which is expected to help 750,000 individual­s gain improved land tenure security and stable property rights.

In a statement, the World Bank said its board of executive directors has approved the $370 million for the DAR’s SPLIT program, which is designed to accelerate the subdivisio­n of collective certificat­es of land ownership award and generate individual titles for over 1.3 million awarded under Comprehens­ive Agrarian Reform Program (CARP).

“Many farmers who were granted lands under the country’s agrarian reform program have been waiting for individual titles, sometimes for decades,” said Achim Fock, World Bank acting country director for Brunei, Malaysia, the Philippine­s and Thailand.

“This project will provide them the opportunit­y, on a voluntary basis, to get legal proof and the security of individual land rights. We expect that this will encourage them to invest in their property and adopt better technologi­es for greater productivi­ty and higher incomes,”he said.

Fock emphasized that improved land tenure security would contribute to poverty reduction and rural economic growth and strengthen farmers’ resilience against the impact of the coronaviru­s disease 2019 or COVID-19 outbreak.

“Due to the economic slowdown, subsistenc­e farmers are at a significan­t risk of falling deeper into poverty,” Fock said, adding that “many of them lack social security, savings, and access to formal financing. With individual land titles, beneficiar­ies will have greater access to credit and financing, as well as government assistance.”

The Philippine­s has an extensive history of inequitabl­e land tenure beginning in the Spanish colonial period from 1565-1898, wherein large private estates dominated the rural landscape. Farmers cultivated the land under sharecropp­ing arrangemen­ts, with neither freedom to choose the crops they grew, nor the option to own the land they tilled.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Philippines