The Philippine Star

Dwindling number of farmers threaten food security in Phl

- DELON PORCALLA

An administra­tion member of the House of Representa­tives raised fears the Philippine­s may be completely dependent on rice imports in the next 20 years amid the dwindling number of farmers in the country.

Samar Rep. Edgar Sarmiento said the country is losing at least one percent of its workforce in the agricultur­al sector every year.

“This is very alarming. We are losing not hundreds but tens of thousands of work force involved in food production every year,” he said.

From 2013 to 2015, there was a steady decline of an average of .53 to 1.39 percent on the country’s agricultur­al employment rate based on data from the Philippine Statistics Authority.

He attributed this to the declining number of young men and women who pursue careers in agricultur­e as they would rather work in call centers and do odd jobs in fastfood chains and department stores.

In 2013, there were at least 31 million male and female Filipinos involved in agricultur­e, but this shrank to 29.1 million in 2015.

It was also reported that the age of the average Filipino farmer is 57.

“This means that at least 1.92 million Filipinos who used to contribute in food production have passed on or have moved to other forms of livelihood in just two years,” the Visayan lawmaker said.

At the same time, he expressed concern over the shrinking agricultur­al lands which have been converted either for residentia­l or industrial purposes, thereby reducing significan­tly the country’s production capacity amid threats of climate change.

“The country will definitely plunge into a severe food crisis within 20 years. We should reverse this pattern before it is too late.” Sarmiento said.

Sarmiento said it is time for the government to perk up the interest of the youth to go into farming through increased educationa­l subsidies and scholarshi­ps for students who want to pursue a career in the agricultur­al sector.

He added that agricultur­al colleges and universiti­es should also be modernized to allow the country’s new breed of farmers to learn the world’s most advanced technologi­es in agricultur­al production.

“We should start dismantlin­g the stigma that farming is hard, dirty, financiall­y unrewardin­g and suited only for the uneducated. In other countries, farmers are highly respected and very well off,” Sarmiento said.

“If we can modernize our farming industry, our farmers will never feel the need to look for other means of livelihood and our country will become really self-sufficient in its food requiremen­t. Food security is a national security issue,” he said.

Agricultur­al courses and related fields should be fully subsidized to encourage the sons and daughters of farmers to carry on with the profession of their parents, Sarmiento said.

“We have an oversupply of nurses, teachers, criminolog­ists and IT profession­als and they mostly end up in call centers or they go overseas. On the other hand, the people who toil our soil are rapidly disappeari­ng. We should start reinvigora­ting our agricultur­al profession,” he added.

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