Daily Tribune (Philippines)

LandBank eyes at least 5,000 AgriSenso borrowers

Borrowers could receive an initial total amount of P500 million under LandBank’s new lending program.

- BY KATHRYN JOSE

The Land Bank of the Philippine­s (LandBank) expects to provide loans to at least 5,000 farmers this year through its AgriSenso Program.

Crisso Pernito, LandBank’s officer-in-charge for programs management, told the DAILY TRIBUNE that the borrowers could receive an initial total amount of P500 million under LandBank’s new lending program.

Pernito said qualified AgriSenso borrowers are those who hve already availed of a previous LandBank lending program.

Agribusine­ss and cooperativ­e components

“The difference in AgriSenso is we want to espouse cluster farming. If you will notice, AgriSenso already has agribusine­ss and cooperativ­e components,” he said Friday at the LandBank’s 15th Digital Financial Inclusion Caravan in Tagaytay City, Cavite.

Pernito said AgriSenso was created in collaborat­ion with multiple government agencies, namely the Department of Agricultur­e and its Agricultur­al Credit Policy Council, Department of Agrarian Reform, and National Irrigation Administra­tion.

All these agencies promote cluster farming which are run by cooperativ­es and associatio­ns of farmers.

“One of the loan requiremen­ts to the borrowers is the endorsemen­t from the National Irrigators Associatio­n that serves farmers who work on contiguous land,” Pernito said.

“That’s why in agricultur­e, the bigger the group of farmers, the more profitable and protected it becomes,” he noted.

‘The difference in AgriSenso is we want to espouse cluster farming. If you will notice, AgriSenso already has agribusine­ss and cooperativ­e components.’

Re-lending option

Pernito added AgriSenso has a re-lending option that LandBank fulfills with the National Irrigators Associatio­n. The latter re-lends the bank’s funds to farmers in exchange of a certain amount of service fee.

In 2022, LandBank started conducting forums on AgriSenso where it shared the lending program’s interest rate of at least 2 percent.

Pernito said LandBank clients have yet to shift to AgriSenso to avail of its comprehens­ive financing that supports the entire supply value chain.

“We just started AgriSenso and applicatio­ns are coming in. But we still don’t have a definite number of borrowers,” he said.

President Ferdinand Marco Jr., who had also formerly been agricultur­e chief said last year that officials have already identified 300 farm clusters and 900 cooperativ­es nationwide.

However, Pernito said AgriSenso still lends to individual borrowers under certain conditions which mainly include a good credit standing and a previous loan applicatio­n with LandBank.

 ?? PHOTOGRAPH COURTESY OF LNADBANK ?? LANDBANK's AgriSenso lending program was created in collaborat­ion with the Department of Agricultur­e and its Agricultur­al Credit Policy Council, the Department of Agrarian Reform, and National Irrigation Administra­tion. All these agencies promote cluster farming which are run by cooperativ­es and associatio­ns of farmers.
PHOTOGRAPH COURTESY OF LNADBANK LANDBANK's AgriSenso lending program was created in collaborat­ion with the Department of Agricultur­e and its Agricultur­al Credit Policy Council, the Department of Agrarian Reform, and National Irrigation Administra­tion. All these agencies promote cluster farming which are run by cooperativ­es and associatio­ns of farmers.

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