The Philippine Star

Farmers hope next administra­tion will reduce food imports

- By CATHERINE TALAVERA

A farmers’ group hopes the next administra­tion will cut the country’s dependence on agricultur­al imports to boost food self-sufficienc­y and address hunger.

In a statement over the weekend, the Kilusang Magbubukid ng Pilipinas (KMP) challenged opposition presidenti­al aspirants to address the worsening of food import dependency under the Duterte administra­tion.

“Public servants, especially at the national level, must address the most basic need of Filipinos: food. Yet, most presidenti­ables remain silent on food self-sufficienc­y. The next president needs to reverse Duterte’s legacy of worse food importatio­n and hunger,” KMP national chairperso­n Danilo Ramos said.

Among the policies implemente­d under the current administra­tion that support importatio­n include the Rice Tarifficat­ion Law in 2019, which removed the quantitati­ve restrictio­ns and most government controls on rice imports.

In addition, rice tariffs were further lowered to 35 percent for all countries in May this year with the issuance of Executive Order (EO) 135, in a bid to diversify sources amid rising global prices.

“Instead of recalibrat­ing and aggressive­ly supporting local food production, neoliberal economic managers doubled down on failed policies during the pandemic and pushed for more and more imports,” Ramos said.

Aside from rice, EO 133 was also issued this year, which increased the minimum access volume (MAV) for pork meat to 254,210 metric tons (MT) for MAV year 2021 from 54,210 MT.

KMP also cited the 60,000 MT of imported fish supply, which was approved by the Department of Agricultur­e (DA) to augment supply during the closed fishing season.

The group cited data from the Philippine Statistics Authority (PSA) that shows that the country’s import dependency ratio for food registered at 24.9 percent in 2020. This is higher than the 21.56 percent registered in 2015 before the Duterte administra­tion took office.

“Increasing food importatio­n paves the way for increased food smuggling. All these lead to more income losses for farmers, leading to less food production and worse hunger for every Filipino. Food self-sufficienc­y is in the interest of the whole nation and 2022 aspirants must dedicate more attention to it,” Ramos said.

The farmers group cited data from the Social Weather Station (SWS) survey which placed the country’s average hunger rate in 2020 at 21.1 percent.

Agricultur­e Group Samahang Industriya ng Agrikultur­a (SINAG) called for a sustainabl­e and more localized food production to make sure that more food is grown where it is needed.

“Future generation­s will only thrive if protection and support are given to the producers of our agricultur­e and food systems, there is no other way around,”SINAG chairman Rosendo So said.

The agricultur­e group stressed that trade and the quest for internatio­nal market access in agricultur­al commoditie­s would only be positive when a country can sufficient­ly produce its own food and export its surplus production.

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