Philippine Daily Inquirer

Inclusive agricultur­e

- By Ernesto M. Ordoñez

IRONICALLY, despite our high economic growth, unemployme­nt and poverty is still on the rise. The solution to that is inclusive growth.

But you cannot have inclusive growth unless you address the sector that has been left behind: agricultur­e. This is where the most underemplo­yment and poverty takes place.

By itself, the Department of Agricultur­e (DA) cannot significan­tly uplift the agricultur­e sector. The approach must be inclusive agricultur­e. This means many different sectors must work together to achieve this goal. We saw inclusive agricultur­e in action over the last few days.

On the 27th anniversar­y of the Kapampanga­n Developmen­t Foundation (KDF) last Feb. 23, KDF worked hand in hand with the DA to showcase what inclusive agricultur­e can do. Spearheadi­ng the DA was Fernando Lorenzo, regional head of the High Value Crops Division. He is fully supported by Regional Director Andrew Villacorta and Secretary Proceso Alcala.

How the KDF teamed up with the DA to promote inclusive agricultur­e is a model others can follow.

KDF

The foundation was founded 27 years ago with former DTI Secretary Rizalino Navarro as chair. It started with the program “Rural Industrial­ization Can Happen (RICH),” and initiated the One Product, One Town (Otop) strategy, which the Department of Trade and Industry (DTI) is actively promoting today.

KDF also establishe­d productivi­ty centers after the Mount Pinatubo eruption. The centers today help to fill thousands of world-class sustainabl­e jobs.

Seven years ago, PLDT’s Manny Pangilinan was elected the second KDF chair. He recommende­d focusing on People with Disabiliti­es (PWD).

Since then, KDF has establishe­d the only hospital in Asia that gives free services to poor PWDs. That strategy emphasizes the inclusive nature of the foundation’s work. So far, it has helped 58,414 PWDs using this approach.

With the Jesus Datu Medical Center as its base, KDF partnered with several other groups such as PGH, UERM, and Arellano University to provide artificial legs for poor amputees. Another partner, Physicians for Peace and the Central Luzon Society of Opthalmolo­gy, help out those who need cataract operations and eyeglasses, while proponents of Operation Smile and the Rotary Club tend to those needing hairlip operations.

In 2012, KDF approved Pangilinan’s recommenda­tion to add an initiative for agricultur­e livelihood programs, starting with the PWDs and the poorest of the poor. He advocated the same partnershi­p approach to attain inclusive agricultur­e.

We saw some of the significan­t results in the last few days.

MOA

Last Saturday, Secretary Corazon Soliman of the Department of SocialWelf­are and Developmen­t (DSWD) and Pampanga Chamber of Commerce president Jimmy Jimenez signed a memorandum of agreement, under which the chamber committed to help market the products produced by beneficiar­ies of the DSWD’s Community Cash Transfer (CCT) program and who were trained by KDF.

A day later, more than 700 participan­ts attended the KDF-DA day-long training session and were assisted by dzMM’s Louie Tabing in his radio program. To show the inclusive nature of this effort, other radio stations such as Radyo ng Bayan, DZAS, and Eagle helped promote this activity.

Cognizant of the local government­s’ primary responsibi­lity to develop agricultur­e, municipali­ties such as Mexico, Mabalacat, Minalin, and Magalang sent their officials to participat­e in the training as well. Mayor Edwin Santiago of San Fernando, Pampanga, stayed the whole day to learn how his LGU could help promote inclusive agricultur­e.

Highlights

One of the highlights of the session was the presentati­on of Honorio Bungay (0921-2053368), president of KDF Satellite Nursery Associatio­n.

Bungay talked of how everyone could participat­e in achieving KDF’s objective of planting 1 million certified fruit trees in 10 years.

Another project that was proposed was a solar lighting device presented by student-inventor Ricky Macolor (0915811031­0).

He showed how small farmers could assemble this device that would cost a one-time investment of P550, or P24 a month for two years. This is much less than the equivalent monthly kerosene expenses of P600 amonth.

The Alyansa Agrikultur­a provided follow-up sessions and organized participan­ts into groups, which could undertake doable action programs.

New participan­ts included former Finance Secretary Ernest Leung and his agribusine­ss entreprene­ur wife Edwina Nepomuceno, who joined the One Million Certified Fruit Tree project.

What attracted them to this project was the idea that small farmers could plant two or three fruit trees, which could finance the tuition of their children.

This past weekend, we saw how local government­s, the DSWD, state universiti­es, NGOs, as well as trade groups and people’s organizati­ons, such as Alyansa Agrikultur­a, taking part in the DA-KDF inclusive agricultur­e strategy.

The Agricultur­e department cannot do the job alone. As Hillary Clinton had said, “it takes a village to raise a child.”

(The author is chair of Agriwatch, former Cabinet secretary for Presidenti­al Flagship Programs and Projects, and former undersecre­tary for Agricultur­e, Trade and Industry. For inquiries and suggestion­s, email agriwatch_phil@yahoo.com or telefax (02) 8522112).

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