Philippine Daily Inquirer

Value chains for rural developmen­t

- Cielito F. Habito

HOWMUCH of our recent economic growth benefits the Philippine countrysid­e? Too little, it seems. Agricultur­e, the most dominant economic activity in rural areas, contribute­d a mere 0.1 percentage point to the 6.5 percent gross domestic product growth in the final quarter of 2013, while services and industry contribute­d 3.5 and 2.8 percentage points respective­ly. This pattern of growth does nothing to make our economy’s overall brisk rate of growth permeate more widely across the country’s economic sectors and geographic areas. With 70 percent of poor Filipinos residing in rural areas, we cannot keep doing things the same way and be content with getting the same results. We simply must get the rural sector to grow and develop much faster than it has over the years.

It’s not for lack of trying; over the years, government and foreign donor agencies have allottedma­ssive resources to assist our rural areas. With the massive leakage of congressio­nal pork barrel funds having come out in the open, we see one reason why rural poverty has hardly fallen in spite of all that. Still, the resources that managed to get through to legitimate projects seemingly failed to have any significan­t effect. Like other donor agencies, the US Agency for Internatio­nal Developmen­t (USAID) has for many years poured millions in developmen­t dollars into our rural areas, especially in Mindanao. But with little discernibl­e impact seemingly achieved to uplift the lives of our rural dwellers, USAID is taking a new approach that focuses on regional cities as fulcrums of rural developmen­t. Its Cities Developmen­t Initiative (CDI) is now premised on the belief that secondary cities hold the key to uplifting socio-economic conditions in the surroundin­g rural areas that are inextricab­ly linked to them economical­ly.

Forget about the first-tier cities ofMetro Manila, Cebu and Davao; they already generate ample resources on their own, and on top of that still receive substantia­l resources from the national government. But cities like Cagayan de Oro, Iloilo City and Batangas City—the three initial focus cities of USAID’s CDI—can be critical to the developmen­t of rural areas around them. This is because by strengthen­ing such cities’ economies, they could in turn pull up surroundin­g rural local economies closely linked to them through various value chains, whether existing or still to evolve. These value chains mostly begin in rural-based primary production units in farms, forests, fisheries ormineral lands, and converge in regional cities where processing, consumptio­n and export take place. Through these value chain linkages, economic growth in the regional cities could spur growth in the rural economies surroundin­g them, thereby dispersing the benefits of growth more broadly and promoting inclusive growth.

In particular, the Batangas City, Cagayan de Oro and Iloilo City economies are closely linked to the rural local economies within the regions they are part of, namely, Calabarzon, Northern Mindanao andWestern Visayas. These cities host some primary production activities in themselves, particular­ly in agricultur­e, livestock and fisheries, and in the case of Cagayan de Oro, some mining as well. But such primary production activities, whose final products after layers of value adding are typically sold and traded in these cities, aremore prominentl­y situated in the rural areas surroundin­g them.

The value chain links of these city economies to the surroundin­g and outlying areas take several forms. First, they play the role of market assembly center for consolidat­ing primary products from various surroundin­g production areas, for onward distributi­on around the region and beyond, and to the rest of the country. Cagayan de Oro, for example, is the dominant produce market center (“bagsakan”) in the northern part of Mindanao, where primary products originatin­g from surroundin­g provinces are assembled and consolidat­ed for distributi­on in consumptio­n centers in other parts of Mindanao, in Manila and other parts of Luzon, and in Cebu and other parts of the Visayas. Second, they host firms/facilities that process primary products originatin­g from the surroundin­g provinces and beyond. Batangas City has feed mills and meat processing firms, Cagayan de Oro hosts fruit processing, coconut oil milling and iron ore sintering, and Iloilo City has enterprise­s that process poultry and livestock. Third, each city is an industrial base for various nonagricul­tural manufactur­ing firms, utilities and constructi­on enterprise­s.

Fourth, the cities are ports of exit for both primary and processed products from other parts of the region and the hinterland­s, destined for other regions of the country, the Southeast Asian region and the world markets. Fifth, they are likewise ports of entry for various primary and processed products destined for consumers in the city and the surroundin­g region, and for raw materials and inputs feeding into industries in the city, the surroundin­g region and beyond. Sixth, they are transport and tourism hubs providing a convergenc­e point for passengers moving between other parts of the country and their surroundin­g areas, apart from being tourism destinatio­ns in themselves. And seventh, they are services hubs that provide vital health, education and financial services for residents in surroundin­g provinces and regions.

Paradoxica­l as it seems, rural developmen­t may yet be better served by boosting city economies around the country. And strengthen­ing rural-urban value chain linkages is key to making the approach work.

*** E-mail: cielito.habito@gmail.com

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