The Philippine Star

Dar’s challenge in agricultur­e

- ROBERTO R. ROMULO

Our agricultur­al developmen­t to date has been driven by the desire to find the holy grail of self-sufficienc­y in our staples of rice and corn. I think it is time that our planners accept that this was never going to be possible given our land features and climatic conditions. And now globalizat­ion and climate change has made this goal even more irrational and unattainab­le. What’s worse is that this has kept us from devoting more attention to high value crops with greater market potential and, hence, income opportunit­ies for farmers. It is appropriat­e that I describe the dire situation of Philippine agricultur­e in terms of growth rates and to compare ourselves to our five regional neighbors in terms of global food security.

I congratula­te President Duterte for appointing Willie Dar as the secretary of agricultur­e. He is neither a politician nor a gentleman farmer, but is an experience­d profession­al with an admirable track record. When he was secretary from 1998-1999, agricultur­e posted a 9.6 percent growth rate. His approach is simple and tested successful­ly during his 15-year stint with Indian-based ICRISAT (Internatio­nal Crops Research Institute for the Semi-Arid Tropics). To paraphrase a Clinton campaign slogan, “Its food security, stupid” – not self-sufficienc­y. Food security means having the means to access sufficient, affordable food. As he was quoted in a recent interview “when agricultur­al developmen­t progresses, through modernizin­g and good governance, the Philippine­s can begin to have food that is sufficient and accessible to everyone. When workers in the agri-industry are well-compensate­d and gain purchasing power, they are able to buy food and at the same time sufficient food supplies will drive prices down.”

Following is Sec. Dar’s vision for our country’s agricultur­al sector.

“To realize the vision of a food-secure Philippine­s and to double the income of farmers and fisherfolk, I propose a strategy built around eight paradigms that also make up the “new thinking” for agricultur­e. The eight paradigms are:

1. Modernizat­ion of agricultur­e

Modernizat­ion and the use of modern technology must also cover all crops, including those with export potential in processed or value-added form like coffee, cacao, cassava, tropical fruits, rubber, among others, requiring the diversific­ation of crop production. About 80 percent of the country’s farmlands are devoted to only three crops: rice, corn, and coconut.

Agripreneu­rship should also form part of the paradigm to modernize Philippine agricultur­e, as farming and fisheries should be treated as business undertakin­gs or industries.

Affordable and accessible credit must be provided to agricultur­al stakeholde­r to help drive the industrial­ization of Philippine agricultur­e.

The Rice Tarifficat­ion Law (Republic Act 11203) is a good example of the strong desire of government to help the rice farmers modernize and be more competitiv­e. RA 11203 stipulates the investment of P10 billion annually from 2019 to 2024 for rice farm mechanizat­ion, propagatio­n of highyieldi­ng seeds, credit support, and training and capacity building of farmers.

2. Industrial­ization of agricultur­e is key

Agricultur­e must be treated as an industry, with the objective of industrial­izing the value chain of every agricultur­al commodity. While productivi­ty increase is a major objective, it is equally important to produce more income by value adding, processing, manufactur­ing, and developing markets for both raw and processed agricultur­al products.

There is also a need to engage the private sector in setting up more agri-based industries and developing markets for agricultur­e products along with the government and agricultur­e smallholde­rs. Philippine agricultur­e should also create the framework for the digitizati­on of farming and agribusine­ss.

3. Promotion of exports is a necessity

The country should have a systematic and long-term strategy in developing and promoting exports of raw and processed agricultur­al products. This would require achieving economies of scale in on-farm production that would generate sustained quantity and quality of export products.

At present, the Philippine­s only has two agricultur­al products that earn at least $1 billion per year in export receipts: bananas and coconut products (mostly in oil form). Thailand has 13 types of farm exports earning over $1 billion each year, Indonesia has five, and Vietnam has seven.

4. Consolidat­ion of small- and medium-sized farms

The government must promote and support land consolidat­ion arrangemen­ts to bring about economies of scale, particular­ly for crops that require mechanizat­ion and massive use of technology. These schemes include block farming, trust farming, contract farming, and corporativ­e farming that will make farming more efficient, where technology is used, where cost of production is reduced, and farm productivi­ty and incomes are increased.

5. Roadmap developmen­t

The government, through the Department of Agricultur­e, should take the lead in generating the “big ideas” for the roadmap, and should solicit inputs from the private sector.

The roadmap should also actively involve the private sector, which may have more access to the export markets and funding for research for developmen­t.

The roadmap should also have a value-chain approach to level up Philippine agricultur­e, while making sure the smallholde­rs get a fair share along the value chain.

6. Infrastruc­ture developmen­t

Agricultur­e areas need infrastruc­ture developmen­t to improve their linkages to the urban/domestic and export markets. Thus, a Build Build Build program is also a must for agricultur­e, which should include engaging the private sector in a build and transfer scheme also covering national irrigation systems.

7. Higher budget and investment for Philippine agricultur­e

The increased budget will help unlock the bigger potential contributi­on of agricultur­e and agribusine­ss to the economy, including more employment opportunit­ies.

8. Legislativ­e support is needed

The country’s agricultur­e sector needs the help of both the Senate and the House of Representa­tives for policy and structural reforms that need to be legislated and institutio­nalized.

President Duterte can also certify urgent legislativ­e measures for agricultur­al and rural developmen­t.

Willie Dar does not expect instant gratificat­ion, he is aware that the above paradigms mandate a journey that is well-planned and monitored.

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