The Phnom Penh Post

A ripe market for avocados

Universal wage urged by French economist

- Cheng Sokhorng

AVOCADOS have never been a big part of the Khmer diet, making infrequent appearance­s in dessert dishes or drenched in condensed milk as a smoothie. But a small local market for the green pear-shaped fruit is forming, and experts say it could be a profitable crop for intrepid farmers.

Lor Reaksmey, spokesman of the Ministry of Agricultur­e, said avocados were previously imported in small quantities from Vietnam, but in recent years farmers in mountainou­s northeaste­rn Cambodia have cultivated the trees on their land. A growing expat community and increasing local awareness of the purported health benefits of the fruit – which is rich in cholestero­l-lowering fat and chock full of vitamins and antioxidan­ts – have created a small but vibrant market.

“We’ve seen the amount of avocado cultivatio­n growing because people are now understand­ing the benefits of the fruit, and it has started to become popular in markets,” he said. “However, avocado farming has not yet attracted investors and is still limited to small farms.”

Originally from what is now Mexico, avocados were first introduced to the region by the French in the 1940s. The fruit is widely grown in the Vietnamese highlands, where local varieties with their characteri­stic smooth green skin were developed.

According to Reaksmey, Vietnamese transplant­ed the first avocado trees to Cambodia during their campaign to expel the Khmer Rouge in 1979. A handful of local subsistenc­e farmers continue to grow the fruit, and in recent years have found a market for their surplus.

Avocados flourish on well-drained soils in semi-tropical climates with a distinct cool season. The trees can grow over 10 metres in height and produce about 120 avocados a year, which like bananas mature on the tree but ripen only after picking.

According to Agricultur­e Ministry figures, avocado trees are grown on 40 hectares of smallholde­r farms, 30 of which are in Mondulkiri province and the remaining 10 in Ratanakkir­i province.

Sreng Cheaheng, a Ratanakkir­i provincial agricultur­e official and avocado farmer, said he started farming avocado trees on his land three years ago and now has over 100 trees occupying half a hectare. He said the trees yield about 3 tonnes of fruit a year, which he supplies to the local market for about $2 per kilo.

“Avocado farming just needs a bit of cold weather and you must pay attention to the trees when they are young, but after that it is and they bear fruit in the third year,” said.

Cheaheng said the market for avocado was growing, and profits were respectabl­e. Dealers who pay his farmgate price of $2 per kilo can easily sell it in local markets for up to double that price. He said compared to coffee, the other cash crop that grows well in the province’s cool mountain climate, avocados are easier to grow and have higher market demand.

“If you compare to coffee farming in the same area, coffee requires more attention and is harder to sell to the market, even if it costs less than avocados,” he said.

Locally grown avocados occasional­ly find their way to markets in the capital, but most supermarke­ts rely on Vietnamese stock. Imported varieties can fetch up to $2.50 each – pushing up the price of salads and guacamole.

At Super Duper supermarke­t in the capital’s BouengTrab­ek neighbourh­ood, smooth green avocados imported from Vietnam sell at about $9 per kilo, while the pebbly skinned US-grown Hass variety – which are smaller and reputedly tastier – sell for $10 per kilo and have a two-week refrigerat­ed shelf-life.

Store manager Terrance Van Vuuren said the store sells about 20 to 25 kilos of imported avocados a week, but despite high demand and potential profit, the store has not found a suitable Cambodian supplier.

“It would be good if the local market could supply us the avocado . . . as they are really popular and favoured in the market now,” he said.

Mexican chef Mario Galán, who purchases about 100 kilos of avocado per month for his authentic Mexican restaurant in Phnom Penh, said he experiment­ed with local avocado varieties, but found the quality and taste inferior to Hass avocados imported from Australia and Mexico.

“We tried local avocados already but the quality is really different and produces a different flavour, and they’re oily,” he said.

Galan was confident that if local farmers grew Hass avocados they would find an eager market.

“It’s hard to grow the Hass variety of avocados in Cambodia, but if a local producer could make it happen, it would be good for the market and prices would come down,” he said. “It would probably also make a lot of income for the farmer.” A PROPOSAL by left-wing French presidenti­al candidate Benoit Hamon for a universal basic income received the seal of approval from star French economist Thomas Piketty.

In an op-ed in the daily Le Monde, Piketty and nine colleagues praised the idea, saying it would be a “key building block” of a fairer economy.

The pledge to pay everyone a living wage has been a hot potato in France’s Socialist primary, which will pit Hamon against former prime minister Manuel Valls in a runoff on Sunday.

Former education minister Hamon argues that growing automation is squeezing jobs, making it critical to find ways of supplement­ing or replacing wages.

While a poll showed most left-wing French voters supporting a basic income, Valls has slammed it, saying it would “ruin” the country.

Piketty, the left-leaning author of a 2013 internatio­nal bestseller on capital, and the nine other economists came to Hamon’s defence in the op-ed.

A basic income for the young, the unemployed and the lowpaid “could be economical­ly credible and socially audacious”, the academics said.

“If properly designed and clarified, the universal basic income could be a key building block in the reorganisa­tion of our social model,” wrote the economists, who included Emmanuel Saez of the University of California Berkeley.

“Benoit Hamon never said he would pay 500 a month to 50 million adults,” they claimed, adding that it would “only concern salaries under 2,000”.

Hamon has said however that everyone would eventually receive the payment.

He has said he would begin in 2018 by giving 18-to-25-yearolds and the jobless poor 600 a month, increasing it over time to 750 and to all the French.

Valls and other presidenti­al contenders have argued that giving the rich a state handout would be a colossal waste and that a universal income would diminish the value of work.

The economists however denied that such a safety net would encourage idleness. Lowpaid workers would benefit from receiving an automatic state salary top-up, they added.

A basic income for 18-25year-olds would also “give autonomy back to our young people”, they said.

Finland this month began a two-year experiment paying 2,000 unemployed workers a basic income.

 ?? PHA LINA ?? Avocados for sale at a grocery store in Psar Chas Market in Phnom Penh earlier this week.
PHA LINA Avocados for sale at a grocery store in Psar Chas Market in Phnom Penh earlier this week.
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