Manila Bulletin

Farmers not part of Coco Levy trust fund committee

- By MADELAINE B. MIRAFLOR

Only representa­tives from three government agencies – Department of Finance (DOF), Department of Budget and Management (DBM), and Department of Justice (DOJ) – will have the final say on how the Coconut Farmers and Industry Trust Fund (CFITF) will be managed and use.

Based on the Republic Act (RA) 11524, which mandates the creation of a 50-year CFITF, there should be a management committee tasked to set investment priorities for the coconut industry with regards to the release and utilizatio­n of the controvers­ial ₱100-billion coco levy fund.

The management committee should be composed of authorized representa­tives from the DOF, DBM, and DOJ.

The committee is also tasked to set the trust fund’s investment themes, asset allocation, and policies; evaluate assets; issue guidelines for portfolio turnover and CFITF management expenses; set annual allocation of the CFITF; and approve financial requiremen­ts.

To recall, RA 11524 directs the Bureau of Treasury to transfer from the accumulate­d coconut levy at least ₱75 in the next five years to the CFITF in the following tranches: ₱10 billion each this year and in 2022; ₱15 billion each on 2023 and 2024; and ₱25 billion in 2025 plus any amount accruing, including interest of the coconut levy, in the special account in the general fund.

The utilizatio­n of coco levy funds, based on RA 11524, will be led by the Philippine Coconut Authority (PCA), which will now have a reconstitu­ted PCA board.

The PCA Board will be chaired by the Department of Agricultur­e (DA) secretary and vice-chaired by the secretary of DOF.

Other board members include the respective secretary of department­s of budget (DBM), science and technology (DOST), and trade (DTI); PCA administra­tor; and three members from the coconut farmers sector, representi­ng Luzon, Visayas, and Mindanao.

On Monday (March 2), the Federation of Free Farmers (FFF) voiced both relief and disappoint­ment over RA 11524, which President Rodrigo Duterte signed on Friday.

“We welcome the release of long-awaited funds that will improve the livelihood and incomes of the country’s 3.5 million coconut farmers and farm workers, who had paid the coconut levies during the Marcos presidency,” FFF said.

“However, we deplore the exclusion of coconut farmers from the newly created Trust Fund Management Committee that will control the management and dispositio­n of coconut levy funds and other assets,” it added.

The Federation also expressed apprehensi­on over the law’s approach to preparing the 50-year master developmen­t plan for the coconut industry.

Dioscoro A. Granada, FFF secretary-general and a coconut farmer in Tagum, Davao del Norte, noted that the new law prescribes rigid percentage allocation­s and implementi­ng agencies for the funding of various components of the industry master plan, which will still be drafted by the PCA in consultati­on with farmers and other industry stakeholde­rs.

Some of these agencies have no direct connection or involvemen­t with coconut farmers or the industry, he said.

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