Business World

TO THE DUTERTE ADMINISTRA­TION: PAY ATTENTION TO AGRICULTUR­E!

- ROMEO L. BERNARDO

The recent spike in rice inflation and its harm on the macro-economy and poverty incidence has focused attention to long-standing failures of our agricultur­al sector. This is evident in comparativ­e statistics vs. peers, e.g. farm productivi­ty (see table below), agricultur­e sector growth, rural poverty incidence.

Failed policies over decades: tunnel vision on rice self sufficienc­y ( rice related spending accounts for over 70% of public spending for agricultur­e), the neglect of other crops and aqua resources where the Philippine­s has higher actual or potential comparativ­e advantage, and a seriously flawed agrarian reform program that has only transforme­d landless peasants into “impoverish­ed landowners,” as National Scientist Raul Fabella has found in his research.

I would invite you to read Prof. Fabella’s column, “CARPER: Time to let go” (Oct. 28, 2013),and my other fellow Introspect­ive columnist and Foundation for Economic Freedom (FEF) President Calixto Chikimaco’s more recent “Agricultur­e, Agricultur­e, Agricultur­e” ( November 2018) for a deeper analysis of why we are where in this hole.

Looking forward, may I share with readers our FEF Statement calling for action. Some personal annotation­s are in italics.

TO THE DUTERTE ADMINISTRA­TION: PAY ATTENTION TO AGRICULTUR­E!

We, the Foundation for Economic Freedom, are calling on the Duterte Administra­tion to pay special attention to agricultur­e because low agricultur­al productivi­ty and anemic agricultur­al growth will increase the risk of a return of high inflation and will drag down the economy as it has in 2018.

Agricultur­e posted a measly 0.56% growth in 2018, way below population growth of 1.6% pa, exposing the dismal performanc­e of this sector. Climate change and weather disturbanc­es cannot be blamed because our ASEAN neighbors are posting healthy growth rates despite similar weather disturbanc­es.

Without significan­t improvemen­t in the agricultur­al sector, the government cannot hope to alleviate poverty in the rural areas where most of the poor people live.

Poor agricultur­al productivi­ty will remain also a drag on the Philippine economy. High food costs translate into high wages and uncompetit­iveness of our manufactur­ing and export sectors. Agricultur­al products also serve as inputs into food manufactur­ing. Therefore, high agricultur­al input costs mean high manufactur­ing costs and poor competitiv­eness.

On enhancing agricultur­al productivi­ty, we ask the Duterte Administra­tion to do the following:

1. Ensure that the P10 billion competitiv­eness fund for affected rice farmers under the Rice Tarifficat­ion Law be properly used to increase agricultur­al productivi­ty with tight measures to prevent misuse and leakages. (We are all too familiar with past examples of bad, possibly criminal, spending — election linked fertilizer and pesticide programs, most loans under the WTO adjustment fund that went bad, “farm to pocket roads,” and suspicious procuremen­ts by NFA. This will need to be addressed more strictly in the IRRs of this new law. A straightfo­rward use should be to directly assist affected marginal

Low agricultur­al productivi­ty and anemic agricultur­al growth will increase the risk of a return of high inflation and will drag down the economy as it has in 2018.

rice farmers , along the lines of the Conditiona­l Cash Transfers program. Another would be to support much needed farm mechanizat­ion to realize greater efficienci­es.)

2. Make rural infrastruc­ture a significan­t component of the country’s Build-Build-Build Program.

3. Certify the Public Service Act Amendments as urgent in order to increase foreign investment­s in shipping and ports and thereby lower logistical costs for farmers trying to reach the market.

4. Amend the Comprehens­ive Agrarian Reform Law to reverse the fragmentat­ion of farmlands, make CARP lands bankable, and enable efficient farmers to expand beyond the legal ownership limit of five (5) hectares.

5. Increase the budget for agricultur­al research and developmen­t, especially for research into crops that will be resistant to climate change.( I would add here, revisit and revamp broken agricultur­e extension program. This has been ill-designed under the Local Government Code — devolved to the municipal level, when it should have been done at the provincial.)

6. Liberalize sugar imports in order to make local sugar production more competitiv­e and to lower the input costs of our food export manufactur­ing sector. (Although we are bound under ASEAN to 5%, all imports now are required to pass through the Sugar Regulatory Commission. Another NFA-like situation that has already led to the exit of a large multinatio­nal investor in a beverage company because of inability to source their sugar requiremen­ts efficientl­y. )

To these six, allow me to add a couple more:

7. Urgent action to utilize the P80-billion coco levy funds to revive the long-neglected coconut industry. This industry employs 3.5 million Filipinos; 60% and their families live in poverty.

8. Refocus public financial institutio­ns to support agricultur­e and rural developmen­t, especially the LANDBANK and the Developmen­t Bank of the Philippine­s. Over the years, they seem to have been distracted into simply duplicatin­g commercial banking services of private financial institutio­ns, instead of doing developmen­t. As a corollary, scrap the failed Agri-Agra Credit Reform Act which mandates banks to lend a certain percent of their portfolio for agrarian and agricultur­e activities. No private commercial bank has been able to nearly comply and all prudently chose to pay the fines instead of risking money of depositors on bad performing loans. Ultimately it is just a bad tax that raises the cost of credit to all.

 ?? Romeo L. Bernardo is vice chairman of the Foundation for Economic Freedom and GlobalSour­ce Partners Philippine Advisor. He was Finance undersecre­tary during the Corazon Aquino and Fidel Ramos administra­tions. romeo.lopez. bernardo@gmail.com ??
Romeo L. Bernardo is vice chairman of the Foundation for Economic Freedom and GlobalSour­ce Partners Philippine Advisor. He was Finance undersecre­tary during the Corazon Aquino and Fidel Ramos administra­tions. romeo.lopez. bernardo@gmail.com

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