Food group seeks gov’t support amid global woes
The Philippine Chamber of Agriculture and Food Inc. (PCAFI) is urging the government to provide support for the private sector to enable it to expand food production amid a coming global food catastrophe caused by the RussiaUkraine war.
In a general membership meeting yesterday, PCAFI president Danilo Fausto said the Philippines faces food security threats, along with soaring food prices, because of its heavy food import dependence.
He said Russia, Ukraine, India, among others, have already stopped wheat exports while many other countries contemplate keeping their food production for their own security.
“We are now on our own. With the private sector providing 95 percent of the total investment, we need to further expand and increase our production to feed our people. But how on earth can we do this if our own government is preventing us from doing so,”Fausto said.
He said the government should not treat the agriculture sector as a charity sector of society, but as a good and profitable business proposition.
“Government should provide the right environment and incentives for the private sector to invest, expand their production, value chain and supply chain logistics, not kill them with competition from cheap and subsidized imported products,”Fausto said.
He said providing cheap food for the consumers and fighting inflation through imports is a short term solution.
“Producing our own food requirements, although a much longer process, will be more sustainable for our people. We appeal for a level playing field from the government. Doing otherwise, we will be shooting ourselves not in the foot, but in the head,” Fausto said.
PCAFI said that with the supply of imported feed wheat now limited, local corn production should be raised.It said corn sufficiency is currently at 57 percent.
“Feedwheat is an alternative to corn, which represents 60 percent
of feed ingredients.Feed itself represents around 70 percent of the cost in growing chickens and pigs,”the group said.
It added that cheaper alternatives to feed inputs should be tapped as those developed by Filipino scientists from University of the Philippines Los Banos.
PCAFI said the DA should promote use of inorganic oilbased fertilizers, utilizing organic materials, resulting in equally high yield and efficient production of rice and other crops.
Fausto cited the need to increase the allocation of the agriculture sector in the country’s national budget.
“We appeal that food production should not be sacrificed as the Department of Budget and Management undertakes hair-cuts for future budget allocation,”Fausto said.
He said livestock and poultry, contributing a third or 30 percent ofagricultural production should get a sizable budget from only three to four percent of the Department of Agriculture (DA)’s budget.