China Daily Global Edition (USA)

China held up as model for farm reforms

Practices like land consolidat­ion draw interest in Philippine­s keen to lift output

- By PRIME SARMIENTO in Hong Kong prime@chinadaily­apac.com

It can pursue policies to support, consolidat­e, and intensify farming operations.”

World Bank

The Philippine­s is among countries that can benefit from China’s expertise in agricultur­al developmen­t to make up for vulnerabil­ities exposed in the coronaviru­s pandemic, analysts said.

They said now is the time for such countries to rebuild their agricultur­e sectors, given a renewed focus on food security amid the disruption­s caused by the pandemic.

The Philippine­s, for one, can learn valuable lessons from China, which has succeeded in boosting farm production and feeding its growing population despite having only 7 percent of the world’s arable land.

Fermin Adriano, special adviser to the Philippine­s’ secretary of agricultur­e, said fragmented land holdings in the Philippine­s are hampering farm productivi­ty. He cited China’s strong institutio­nal support, which has made land consolidat­ion possible. He wants to see this practice replicated in the Philippine­s.

“Land consolidat­ion will create economies of scale,” Adriano said. By consolidat­ing many small land holdings into one big farming operation, farmers can pool their resources and jointly market their produce, which will allow them to bypass middlemen and earn more.

Before the pandemic struck, the Philippine­s had been among the fastest-growing economies in Southeast Asia, posting annual average growth of more than 6 percent from 2016 to 2019. The agricultur­e sector, however, lagged with an annual average growth rate of 1.3 percent.

“Notwithsta­nding the importance of the sector, agricultur­al policy has been manifestly unsuccessf­ul in sparking dynamic developmen­t,” the World Bank said in its September report on agricultur­e in the Philippine­s.

The Washington-based lender said the pandemic has given an opportunit­y to the Philippine­s to create a “more resilient, inclusive, competitiv­e, and environmen­tally-farm system.

One of the World Bank’s recommende­d interventi­ons is land consolidat­ion, and it has advised the Philippine­s to learn from China’s agricultur­al model. The bank said China’s land-consolidat­ion program has expanded household farms and created more land cooperativ­es and company-run farms.

“While the government cannot create new arable land, it can pursue policies to support, consolidat­e, and intensify farming operations on the land that is still available,” the World Bank said.

Adriano also noted the lack of funding for agricultur­al research in the Philippine­s. He said this stands in contrast to China’s huge investment­s in agricultur­al research and developmen­t, allowing the country to further develop high-yielding crops such as rice.

The Chinese Academy of Agricultur­al Sciences said China is among the world’s leaders in agricultur­al research and one of the biggest contributo­rs of agricultur­al patents, according to a report filed by Xinhua News Agency.

Mary Ann Sayoc, public affairs lead for the internatio­nal seed grower and supplier East-West Seed Group, said China has been helping the Philippine­s to develop high-yield rice varieties through the Philippine-Sino Center for Agricultur­al Technology.

The center, in the northern province of Nueva Ecija, was establishe­d in 2000 through a $5 million grant from China. It has developed varieties that have the potential to produce 12 metric tons of rice per hectare, or three times the national average.

Irrigation infrastruc­ture

Sayoc said the Philippine­s can also learn from China’s huge investment in irrigation and farm infrastruc­ture. This is especially crucial as the pandemic has shown some key problems in local agricultur­e.

Among the problems are bottleneck­s in the supply chain. Sayoc cited reports of farmers dumping their vegetable harvests as the lockdown had prevented them from delivering their produce.

The disruption­s in produce deliveries show that most Filipino farmers still need training on marketing, processing and informatio­n technology, according to Iloisa Romaraog-Diga, co-founder of e-commerce website Session Groceries.

She said that instead of dumping undelivere­d vegetables, farmers could be trained to process these vegetables into pickles and other food products.

Romaraog-Diga works with farmers in the northern Philippine­s province of Benguet, where she helps them to deliver their vegetables directly to consumers through online markets.

“Most farmers just harvest their crops and bring these to the trading post to sell. They don’t know that you can use your mobile phone to presell your products to your target clients,” Romaraog-Diga said.

Adriano said such efforts need to be reflected in the Philippine government’s budgetary allocation for the agricultur­e sector. “Agricultur­e contribute­s 10 percent to the GDP, but do you know how much it gets?” he said.

For this year’s budget, the Philippine government allotted 62.29 billion pesos ($1.3 billion) to the agricultur­e department. This is equivalent to roughly 1.5 percent of the total 4.1 trillion pesos budget for 2020.

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