Philippine Daily Inquirer

Effective agricultur­al extension

- The author is Agriwatch chair, former secretary of presidenti­al programs and projects and former undersecre­tary of DA and DTI. Contact is agriwatch_phil@yahoo.com ERNESTO M. ORDOÑEZ

At long last, effective agricultur­e extension may soon be here. Next to a very ineffectiv­e rural credit system, weak agricultur­e extension was identified by the five-coalition Agri Fisheries Alliance as the second biggest culprit on why our rural 30-percent poverty rate is far worse than Vietnam’s 19 percent and more than double Indonesia’s and Thailand’s 14 percent.

The AFA is composed of five separate groups whose main objectives are agricultur­e growth and increasing farmer and fisherfolk incomes. These sectors are: Small farmers and fisherfolk, agribusine­ss, science and academe, rural women, and mul- tisector leaders. The AFA cited the main cause of agricultur­e extension problem as the devolution of 17,000 extension workers from the Department of Agricultur­e (DA) to the local government units (LGUs). Though some LGUs have done excellentl­y in agricultur­e extension, most have not because of structural deficienci­es.

Disconnect

There is today a serious disconnect between the extension workers and the small farmers and fisherfolk they are supposed to serve. This is because, unlike the DA, the LGU may have other priorities and inadequate agricultur­e expertise.

There were four meetings with Agricultur­e Secretary Manny Piñol that resulted in a groundbrea­king meeting last Thursday, Jan. 18. The first meeting happened in a four-hour dialogue be- tween the five AFA coalition leaders and Piñol on AFA’s six priority recommenda­tions. Even then, Piñol already knew the failures of agricultur­e extension. The second meeting was when the Coalition for Agricultur­al Modernizat­ion of the Philippine­s (CAMP), the AFA’s science and technology component, was asked by Piñol to present a proposal for agricultur­e extension structural change. The third meeting was the submission of a proposed executive or department order submitted to Piñol during a Go-Negosyo pioneering agricultur­e event spearheade­d by Presidenti­al Adviser Joey Concepcion. The fourth meeting was last Jan. 18, when Piñol gave the directive to implement the suggested structural agricultur­e extension reengineer­ing immediatel­y in Ilocos Norte in Luzon, Samar in the Visayas, and Agusan del Sur in Mindanao. This proposal catalyzed by CAMP chair Emil Javier and president Ben Pecson (0927-2120351) is for a “collaborat­ive provincial agricultur­e and fishery extension system.”

LGU leadership

At the center of this system is the leadership of the provincial LGUs. This is because the LGUs are closer to the realities of small farmers and fisherfolk in their respective areas and can therefore better address their unique needs and problems. They have economies of scale: Not too small like municipali­ties, nor too large like regions. Finally, they can provide sustained agricultur­e developmen­t budgets, provided they get some national government financial support.

This reengineer­ed extension system has three major strategies. First is location-specific technology developmen­t and demonstra- tion. This will be provided by today’s largely underutili­zed expertise at the state universiti­es and colleges in strategic provincial locations with farmers, fisherfolk, and agribusine­ss.

Second is partnershi­p building and engagement. This involves establishi­ng and sustaining strong research-extension-farmers-fisherfolk-agribusine­ss linkages with correspond­ing institutio­nal arrangemen­ts.

Third, and most importantl­y, there will be capacity strengthen­ing. This aspect has been sorely missing since the agricultur­al extension workers were devolved to the LGUs. It involves the massive training of LGU agricultur­e extension workers, farmers, fisherfolk, rural women and the youth on improved agricultur­e and fisheries production, processing and marketing technologi­es.

Under President Duterte and Agricultur­e Secretary Manny Piñol, agricultur­e has reversed the downward agricultur­e trend from the previous six years. This positive developmen­t can be further significan­tly enhanced through a revolution­ary change in agricultur­al extension: Provincial LGUs will now be empowered; the technical expertise of the state universiti­es and colleges will be harnessed, and the provincial agricultur­e extension system will be reengineer­ed with all stakeholde­rs participat­ing in a change that has long been needed.

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