Philippine Daily Inquirer

Not too late

- ERNESTO M. ORDOÑEZ 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.

For some recommenda­tions contained in a position paper approved by leaders from different agricultur­e-related sectors, it is not too late for the current administra­tion to take action. These are the 12 reform recommenda­tions listed in “Transform Agricultur­e for Food Security, Job Creation and Balanced Growth.”

Never have we seen leaders from these sectors agreeing unanimousl­y on key actions that must be taken to get us out of our dismal agricultur­e situation. These sectors, the concerned groups and their founding dates are:

1. Farmers and fisherfolk­Federation of Free Farmers (FFF-1953)

2. Agribusine­ss–Philippine Chamber of Agricultur­e and Food Inc. (PCAFI-1953)

3. Science and academe-Coalition For Agricultur­e Modernizat­ion in the Philippine­s (CAMP-2004)

4. Agricultur­e alliances-Alyansa Agrikultur­a (AA-2003)

5. Nongovernm­ent organizati­ons–Bayan sa Agrikultur­a (BSA-2021)

The 12 recommenda­tions have been submitted to the presidenti­ables for their positions. But it is not too late for the current administra­tion’s government officials to take action on these before its term is over. We have seen some movement in this direction. Here are the recommenda­tions:

Role: Agricultur­e and fisheries should be recognized as the main guarantor of food security and foundation for economic recovery. Farmers and fishers should be treated as saviors and lead actors, not as mendicants.

Budget: Agri-fisheries deserves adequate, sustained and effectivel­y-used funding. Its budget should at least be doubled and its allocation optimized.

Domestic vs. import: Emphasis must be on self-reliance in domestic production, farmers’ productivi­ty, profitabil­ity and protection from pandemics, calamities and climate change events. The government should implement safeguards to protect local producers from serious market disruption­s, unfair trade practices and smuggling. Importatio­n must be a last resort, and benefits therefrom should be shared among producers and consumers. The Rice Tarifficat­ion Law must be reviewed and amended.

Allocation: Substantia­l and fairly allocated support should be accorded to commoditie­s other than rice—coconut, corn, high-value crops, fish, poultry and livestock. Tariff collection­s must be earmarked for sectors affected by imported goods.

Clustering and credit: To ensure producers’ livelihood and higher incomes, the Department of Agricultur­e (DA) should lead the shift from monocroppi­ng to localized, diversifie­d, sustainabl­e production systems and cluster/ cooperativ­e/community-based approaches in production, value-adding and marketing. A more effective rural credit and crop insurance program must be emplaced, including the creation of a Land Bank subsidiary dedicated to lending to small farmers and fishers. Mechanizat­ion, digital technology and other innovation­s should be fast-tracked.

Value chain and instrument­ation system: More investment­s are necessary in rural, market, postharves­t and agri-fisheries processing infrastruc­ture to curb postproduc­tion losses, cut marketing expenses, enhance producers’ access to alternativ­e outlets for their products and reduce the cost of food to consumers.

Fisheries: Given the immense area and economic potential of our territoria­l and inland waters, a Department of Fisheries and Marine Resources should be created. The government must assert our sovereign rights in the West Philippine Sea, a major source of marine fish supply.

LGU emphasis: The DA and other agencies should establish a partnershi­p—based on shared priorities, responsibi­lities and resources—with local government units (LGUs) that will put more resources and efforts into agricultur­e and fisheries. Upgrading LGUs’ capacity to provide agricultur­al support services must be prioritize­d.

Stakeholde­r participat­ion: Genuine representa­tion and involvemen­t of farmers, fishers and other stakeholde­rs must be institutio­nalized at all levels of planning and monitoring. Sectoral appointees to government agri-fisheries boards, councils and committees must have a proven track record of service.

Women empowermen­t: Women have limited participat­ion in areas like fisheries production, agricultur­al services and equipment/facilities. Equity, productivi­ty and justice call for a bigger women’s empowermen­t program in agri-fisheries. The youth should also be assisted to go into the sector.

Agrarian reform with support service: As mandated by the Constituti­on, the agrarian reform and support services program in private agricultur­al and public lands must be fully implemente­d.

Land and water use: A National Land and Water Use Law is urgently needed—along with interagenc­y and citizens’ mobilizati­on programs—to conserve and regenerate our soil, water, biodiversi­ty and other natural resources and to guarantee food security for all. To ensure a unified direction, the National Irrigation Administra­tion should be placed under the DA’s supervisio­n.

Examples of new action in the right direction are the executive branch’s restoratio­n of and stakeholde­r participat­ion in certain bodies it abolished, and the legislativ­e branch’s increase in the agricultur­e budget that the executive branch had proposed. The current government officials should continue action in this direction, before a new president hopefully implements the 12 recommenda­tions fully during the next term.

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