Philippine Daily Inquirer

When PH had enough rice

- MENCHU AQUINO SARMIENTO Menchu Aquino Sarmiento is writing a biography of Rafael M. Salas, edited by Butch Y. Dalisay Jr.

Fifty years ago, the Philippine­s had more than enough rice. Our population was 32 million, or around a third of what it is now. For years, the Philippine­s had imported rice, but, in 1967, we had a surplus of 200,000 metric tons. New high-yielding varieties (HYV) assured a second harvest. The HYV yield per hectare was triple. Some rice farmers’ incomes quadrupled.

In 1968, we exported a modest 65,000 mt because we could, and gifted Indonesia with a planeload of HYV seeds. Thus was fulfilled Marcos’ 1965 campaign promise of full rice bowls, propelling the Nacionalis­ta Party to a 1969 mid-term victory.

Rice sufficienc­y meant more than the optics of government warehouses filled to the rafters, as President Duterte demands. It was a complex national endeavor requiring thousands of tradition-bound farmers to switch to HYVs, with hundreds of agricultur­al technician­s to train them. Credit, irrigation, drier and storage facilities were provided, along with support from media and schools. The government guaranteed a purchase price for palay as an incentive for the farmers to keep planting more. This would stop the vicious cycles of rice shortages and importatio­n.

Marcos’ first executive secretary, the late Rafael M. Salas, orchestrat­ed the Rice Sufficienc­y Program’s success. He worked beyond regular office hours, networked tirelessly and visited the hinterland­s of priority rice-producing provinces by banca or carabao. He summarily fired or floated erring public officials, regardless of political color or powerful kin, declaring: “The Philippine bureaucrac­y needs periodic forceful rebukes to prod it on.”

Still, Salas, a Zen Buddhism practition­er, never used threats or profanity. He would have been 90 this August.

Salas resigned from the Marcos Cabinet in 1969 to head the United Nations Fund for Population Activities. He attributed the inexorable decline in rice production throughout martial law to the authoritar­ian government: “The absence of legislativ­e and electoral checks allowed the allocation of resources to unproducti­ve sectors. The sustained investment needed in agricultur­e was lacking. Increased elitism ruptured the close ties between farmer and government once nurtured by the Rice Sufficienc­y Program.” Salas also laid the groundwork for the Philippine Population Commission in February 1969, prodding President Marcos to issue an executive order delineatin­g a national policy on population; as he pointed out, unless our population growth kept apace with our overall developmen­t, we must keep running just to stay in place. He also advocated for meaningful land reform and more equitable income distributi­on. Succeeding presidenci­es showed little political will in these matters.

Salas credited the Philippine Rice Sufficienc­y Program’s success to what he called “participat­ory management,” the basis for a fully functional democracy. After the Marcos regime’s demise, many of the “Salas Boys,” the prototypic­al technocrat­s who had worked with him during Marcos’ first term, went on to Cabinet positions under other presidents.

The passing generation, such as the late Washington SyCip, still call Rafael M. Salas “the best president the Philippine­s never had.” Because of him, there once was that brief shining moment when the Philippine­s had more than enough rice.

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