A paper written by Pablito P. Pamplona, Ph.D published at www.ppdci.org. This is a very relevant article not only among policy-makers but also to us farmers.
Philippine Agriculture and the High Incidence of Poverty and Unemployment
Pedrito P. Pamplona, Ph.D.
INTRODUCTION
When the National Statistics and Coordinating Board (NCSB) came out
in May 2012 with data indicating the high incidence of poverty and
unemployment in the country President Benigno C. Aquino III opened the
venue for recommendation on how to overcome these problems. Various
recommendations were published in the newspapers, many dealing on how
the manufacturing, industry and service sectors should help solve the
problems. The State-of-the-Nation Address of President Benigno Aquino
III on July 2, 2013 discussed very little on how the agriculture
industry should be used as a tool of overcoming unemployment and
poverty. Hence, this recommendation.
This paper discusses the current state of the agriculture industry
which cause high incidence of poverty and unemployment. Roughly 60% of
the Philippine population depends on income and employment in
agriculture with generally very low productivity bringing low farmers’
income below the poverty threshold level. The reasons for these low
productivity and income are discussed. Recommendations are made to
develop a modern agriculture industry responsive to provide the need for
high income and employment. These include the utilization of the vast
idle upland and the conversion of upland grown to crops with low
productivity to commercial tree crops with high productivity and
farmers’ income. Moreover, an intervention is needed to overcome the
decreasing productivity of the coconut trees causing the poor coconut
farmers increasingly become poorer. The major components include
promoting adequate fertilization, massive production and distribution of
high yielding hybrid seed nuts and intercropping of high value crops
when possible. Suggestion is made on how to best use the P70 billion
unfrozen coconut levy fund.
1/ The author is a
retired Professor and Director of Research of the University of Southern
Mindanao in Kabacan, Cotabato. Early this year, he received the
DA-Khush Award of Distinction – the highest award given to a crop
scientist by the Federation of Crop Science Society of the Philippines
(FCSSP) to honor individuals whose outstanding contribution to crop
science and the industry in the Philippines have made significant impact
on agriculture, particularly in improving the welfare of the small
Filipino farmers. Previous to this, he received the National
Outstanding Agricultural Scientist Award and the Outstanding Philippine
Civil Service Award both in Malacañan Palace. He is currently involved
in diversified commercial tree crop farming and in the establishment of
demo /model farms for the upland poor farmers including the IPs
(Indigenous Peoples) to follow.
- II. ONCE A GREAT AGRI-COUNTRY, NOW NO MORE
In coming out with the effective strategies on how the agriculture
sector shall help overcome unemployment and poverty, it is important to
look back at where the Philippine agriculture was, the shortcomings
committed so as not to perpetuate but correct them.
The Philippines was once a great agricultural country in the 1970s to
the early 1990s. It was looked up by other developing countries as
model in agricultural
development and productivity. One time during those years the
Philippines surprised the whole world by overcoming rice shortage using
an innovative strategy. It tapped the expertise and resources of the
large business communities, mostly base in Makati, to helped produced
surplus rice for the country for several years.
The author is reminded of UP Los Baños where he finished both his
master and doctoral degrees. UPLB was then a model for agricultural
research and education. Many of his classmates at UPLB were from
developing countries of Asia, Africa and Latin America. Majority where
scholars of their government studying the Philippine success stories in
agriculture to serve as models in their country. Well-equipped
facilities, mostly grant from the World Bank and highly-trained educated
professors at UPLB, many with advanced degrees from the top
agricultural universities in USA, taught dynamic and relevant strategic
lessons in agricultural development. These world-class scientists made
many outstanding scientific breakthroughs. Examples are Dr. Emerita de
Guzman who discovered the 100% production of makapuno nuts in every
coconut tree; Dr. Ramon Barba who discovered the flower induction of
carabao mango paving the way for the current leadership of the country
in the commercial production of carabao mango.
Presently, few foreign graduate students come to UPLB mostly studying
rice production in cooperation with IRRI. Philippine agriculture and
its agricultural education system become outdated; less relevant to the
needs of developing countries. It failed to implement critical and
strategic measures to maintain its leadership in agriculture. It is no
longer the source of advance knowledge, technologies and innovations
responsive to the new and changing opportunities of modern agriculture –
more diversified and with the enclosure of upland commercial tree crop
farming for high farm productivity, farmers’ income and employment.
Neighboring countries have responded better to these new opportunities.
Leadership in agriculture demands not just quantity but quality
manpower – top caliber scientists and updated modern R & D
facilities. In these areas the Philippines is now lagging behind its
neighbors. The country for decades has the lowest expenditure to R
& D approximately ¼ of what the neighboring countries spent in
relation to the country’s GDP. It lacks critical high level of manpower
to conduct R & D and occupy managerial position in upland
agriculture for a highly productive and competitive commercial tree crop
farming. Few scientists who finished advance degrees specialization in
these crops in 1970 to 1980s have now retired leaving a vacuum of
scientific leadership in the development of these crops towards high
productivity and global competitiveness.
In the frequent visit of the author to neighboring countries, he
noted that UPLB is no match even to the regional quality manpower and
facilities of agricultural universities and R & D centers in
Malaysia and Thailand. After decades of neglect, Philippine agriculture
remains largely a rice, corn and coconut industry of decreasing
productivity and farmers’ income. It is a country of both large idle
and underutilized uplands and uplands grown to crops with low
productivity and farmers’ income causing widespread poverty.
- III. LOW FARM PRODUCTIVITY DOMINATES PHILIPPINE AGRICULTURE
Due to the failure of the Philippines to upgrade its agricultural
commensurate to meet the opportunities of the time, it has now been
overtaken by neighboring countries in farm productivity, agriculture
export, net agricultural export and overall per capita income as shown
in Table 1. A careful study of the economic development of these
neighboring countries shows that much government resources have been
poured in during the last three to four decades in crop diversification
and with the enclosure of high income commercial tree crops for job
generation, poverty reduction and for global competitiveness.
Consequently, these countries have transformed the predominantly
depressed to productive upland communities through highly profitable
commercial tree farming side by side with crops for food security.
Table 1. The Philippine agriculture/economic situation compare with
its neighbors. The Philippine has the lowest agric productivity,
agricultural export and food export compare to the neighboring ASEAN.
|
COUNTRIES
|
FARM PRODUCTIVITY
US$, (2009)
(Income/ha/yr)*
|
AGRICULTURAL
EXPORTS (US$ BILLION, 2009)*
|
NET AGRI GOOD EXPORT OR IMPORTER? US$ BILLION***
|
2009
CAPITA INCOME
(US$)
|
|
340
|
4.0
|
Net importer = >1.0
|
2,600***
|
|
650
|
11.0
|
Net exporter = 12.9
|
4,161
|
|
1760
|
31.0
|
Net exporter = 16.6
|
8,051
|
|
1063
|
34.0
|
Net exporter = 5.6
|
2,942
|
* Asian Development Bank
** University of ASIA and the Pacific
*** Fitch data (March 2013)
Farm productivity is an indicator of the farmers’ income – what a
farmer in the Philippines gets from his land which is limited to three
ha under the Agrarian Reform Law. The Philippines farm productivity as
indicated in Table 1 is only US$ 340/ha per year, meaning that a farmer
with three hectares, earns US$ 1022/year or equivalent to P 43,869/year –
much below the poverty threshold level of P93,852 prescribed by the
NSCB for 2012. Almost all coconut farms and many of the agricultural
uplands are grown to crops with low productivity.
Poverty level in the Philippines is the highest among the neighboring
countries mainly because the farm productivity of the Philippine
agriculture is very low; roughly one-half that of Indonesia, one third
of Vietnam and one-fourth of Thailand. Thailand which depended on the
Philippines for the agricultural education of its leaders up to 1980s is
now the acknowledged world leader in crop diversification to high
income upland tree crops. It surpassed both Malaysia and Indonesia in
the volume of rubber produced – one of the major reasons for its
becoming the main center in the ASEAN for car and light vehicle
assembly.
One of the indicators of the progress of the agricultural industry is
the production of food surplus for export. The agricultural export of
the Philippine is still in one digit, the three other neighboring
countries are having big double digits (Table 1). Consequently the
Philippines is the only net food importer with the lowest GNP in the
region. Among the biggest food export of Indonesia, Malaysia and
Thailand is the vegetable oil in the form of palm oil. The Philippines
on the otherhand imported P27.50 billion of palm oil from Malaysia in
2012. This is expected to increase to over P54.0 billion in the next
eight years unless there is a bold step to expand oil palm farming to
benefit the Filipino farmers. The importation of palm benefits the
already rich Malaysian farmers.
- IV. TREE CROPS PROVIDES HIGH JOB GENERATION AND INCOME
Unlike the Philippines which remain largely a rice, corn and coconut
country during the last three decades neighboring countries converted
their idle uplands as well as land grown to crops with low productivity
to diversified high income commercial tree crops. Among these crops are
rubber and oil palm (Table 2). In addition, Indonesia planted over a
million ha of cacao; Vietnam planted almost a million ha of coffee.
Almost all vacant agricultural uplands in Malaysia, Thailand and Vietnam
are now planted to these crops. In the late 1980s, Malaysia made the
bold decision that uplands grown to low income crops including large
areas devoted to rainfed rice will be converted to high income oil palm
under a World Bank loan. The decision was recently cited as a landmark
in agriculture as farmers were liberated from poverty by deriving income
from oil palm more than enough to buy rice but with surplus for other
expenses. The Philippine have planted limited areas of rubber and oil
palm of 165,000 and 72,000, respectively and of low productivity as this
is not back up adequately by R & D.
Table 2. Comparison of neighboring countries on areas planted to high income tree crops.
|
COUNTRY
|
AREA (‘000 HA) PLANTED
|
FULL-TIME JOB GENERATED (Person/Year)
|
|
|
RUBBER
|
OIL PALM
|
||
|
2,434
|
850
|
1,642,000
|
|
3,414
|
1,000
|
6,707,000
|
|
1,248
|
6,000
|
3,624,00
|
|
850
|
-
|
425,000
|
|
165
|
72
|
118,500
|
But why rubber and oil palm? For two main reasons – job and high
income generation. Both crops are unbeatable in rural job generation
(Table 2). Tree crop farming requires generally more than twice
manpower than in rice, corn and coconut farming. Every two hectares of
these crops generate one whole-year-round quality farm job – twice that
in rice and corn; three times that in coconut production which are
largely seasonal. Harvesting of the milky substance of rubber known as
tapping is done every other day, one ha/day and one laborer to a ha the
whole-year-round. This mean a two-hectares rubber farm need a laborer
everyday. Oil palm fruits known as fresh fruit bunches are harvested
every 10 to 15 days requiring two laborers/ha.
Secondly, using modern agricultural practices any of the two crops
can provide a small landholder with 2.5 hectares high income more than
twice the amount indicated by the NSCB in the poverty threshold level of
P93,500/year. The income of a typical oil palm or rubber farmer owing
2.5 ha is enough to allow him to buy nutritious food for his family,
build a concrete house, buy a four wheel vehicle and send his children
to college. A hectare of any of these two crops when adequately
attended provide a monthly income of not less than P6,000/month or
P72,000/ha per year. Well-managed farmers using updated technologies
provide a net income of over P10,000/month or P120,000/year. The high
income from these crops transforms the farmers in neighboring countries
from poverty to prosperity. That’s why Thailand, Indonesia, Malaysia
and Vietnam beat the Philippines in overcoming poverty. They have
already met the target under the Millennium Development Goal on poverty
reduction as prescribed by the United Nations to half poverty by 2015.
The Philippines which has a poverty level of from 33% in late 1990s has
to reduce this to 16.60% in 2015; poverty today is still at 27.6% making
reduction to 16.60% nearly an impossible dream.
- V. OVERCOMING THE DECREASING PRODUCIVITY OF THE COCONUT TREE
Coconut trees occupy 3.56 million hectares, about 1/4 of the more
than 12 million hectares of agricultural crop lands of the Philippines.
It is the source of livelihood for over 20 million Filipinos in the
upland. Coconut was once the pride of the Philippines agriculture. In
the 1970 to 1980 a typical coconut farmer was a proud farmer with fairly
good income. During those years, the children of coconut farmers
became scholars supported by the coconut levy fund pursuing degree
courses with expenses not at his worry. Not anymore – the income of a
typical coconut farmer today with a farm of 2.5 ha is below P40,000/year
less than half of what is prescribed in the poverty threshold level.
The national yield of coconut trees of 80 nuts/tree per year is among
the world’s lowest – 2/3 of that of Indonesia, much below the irrigated
coconut trees of India and those in the elevated beds of the swampy
plains of Thailand producing over 200 nuts/ha per year.
Comprehensive and concerted technology transfer program in coconut
farming is sadly lacking. Consequently, the application of strategic
science-based technologies and knowledge to produce high coconut yield
is foreign to most coconut small landholders. Traditional practices
base on misconception of what is the coconut trees still exists. These
are the findings of this author while working as a consultant of a
foreign aid donor to the victims of typhoon Pablo in a predominantly
coconut province of Mindanao.
Inadequate fertilization and lack of program to use the high yielding
hybrids are the major reasons keeping the coconut farms in low
productivity. As with any other agricultural crops, adequate
fertilization ensures high and sustainable yield of the coconut trees
over many years. Scientific studies show that adequate fertilization
of the coconut trees could increase the current yield to at least 2.5
times with the cost of fertilizer representing only 10 to 15% of the
added benefits. Most coconut farmers however don’t fertilizer. They
have the perceptions handed down from generation to generation that if
they fertilize the trees and someday stop ferti
lizing the coconut trees will be offended (“magtampo”) and stop
bearing fruits or become barren. Lack of fertilization causes the
draining through nut production of nutrients like nitrogen, phosphorous,
potassium, magnesium, chlorine and calcium in the soil and is causing
the decreasing yield of coconut over the years.
Research findings of the author as shown in Fig 1 leaves no doubts
that when the neglected coconut tree is provided with TLC (tender loving
care) – meaning, the hybrid tree is adequately fertilized, it
response positively by providing the farmers with high yield and income.
The current norms for planting and replanting of coconut trees by
most coconut farmers is with the use of traditional late maturing and
low yielding coconut varieties. Even the seed nuts distributed by the
government to the Pablo typhoon victims where nine millions of coconut
trees were uprooted is of this norm. Agriculture is now at the modern
era of using hybrids to shorten the period to maturity and dramatically
increase the yield of crops four or more times over the traditional
varieties. The use of hybrids pushes the corn and rice to high yield –
almost at national sufficiency level. It is now a common farmers’
practice to use seeds of hybrid rice, corn, oil palm, hybrid rubber,
sugar cane to increase yield. This is not so in coconut farming in the
Philippines.
In 2011, the author accidentally discovered in one of his foreign
study tours on ASEAN agriculture that the Philippine developed
technology of hybrid coconut production virtually abandoned in the
Philippines was pick-up by Malaysia. The Malaysia government
commissioned a private company to mass produce and distribute hybrid
seed nuts to small farmers on plant-now-take-care (PNTC) shown in Figure
2.
This dramatically increases the coconut yield four times and the income
of the farmers above the poverty threshold level. The technology of
hybrid coconut seed nut production use in Malaysia was developed in the
Philippines through a World Bank loan, each and every taxpaying Filipino
is now paying that loan benefiting the Malaysian farmers – not the
pitiful Filipino coconut farmers.
Urgent and appropriate intervention is needed to change the existing
recipes towards making the poor coconut farmers increasing become poorer
with time so they will not contribute to the widening gap between the
rich and the poor. These component recipes are lack or adequate
fertilization, absence of program for planting and replanting of old
senile trees with early and high yielding varieties or hybrids plus the
World Bank prediction of the decreasing price of coconut oil in the next
decades.
Increasing yield through the use of hybrid and adequate fertilization
still provide the greatest hope of the coconut farmers to cope up with
the decreasing price of copra. Even if the current price of copra is
decreased by 20% but that the yield of coconut is increased three times,
a coconut farmer will still have higher income. Intercropping of crops
like cacao, banana and other fruits can increase productivity and
farmers’ income but not as much benefits as the planting of hybrid seed
nuts and adequate fertilization.
- VI. CAN PHILIPPINE AGRICULTURE BE GREAT AGAIN?
It is not whether it can but the urgent necessity that every Filipino
should help and support President Benigno B. Aquino III to direct the
utilization of the resources of the state in restoring Philippines
agriculture to its past glory for two major reasons, namely: (1)
agriculture provides the greatest hope of the country to fastract the
solution of solving the two major problems of high incidence of
unemployment and poverty, (2) provide the flatform for an emerging
middle class among farmers to help sustain or accelerate the growth of
other industries – manufacturing, industry and service and in ensuring
the overall economic growth of the country which benefits almost all
Filipinos.
Some recommendations which President Aquino should implement and
leave as a legacy of bringing the Philippine agriculture towards
regaining its pass glory in order to help overcome poverty and
unemployment are as follows:
- Provide matching resources to meet the challenges and opportunities of the coconut industry. These include massive production of hybrid seed nuts to support replanting of old senile tree and implement a comprehensive technology transfer program particularly on plant nutrition for high sustainable productivity and yield. The unfrozen levy fund or part of it should be utilized for this purpose. Part of the levy fund should be used to provide scholarship to children of poor and deserving coconut farmers with the aim in view of building manpower who could provide leadership in building prosperous coconut farmers. Suspended collection of the coconut levy should now be restored to ensure future adequate funds for modernizing the coconut R & D manpower and facilities. Proper use of levy fund is what made rubber and oil palm world-class competitive commodities in Malaysia and Indonesia. The Philippine should learn from these countries the proper use of levy fund of coconut not as a “milking cow” of politicians.
- Implement a comprehensive, integrated and holistic agricultural development program and to include large-scale commercial tree crop farming utilizing the more than one million ha of grass and brushlands of the country for oil palm, coffee and rubber production. Moreover, uplands grown to low productivity and income crops should be converted to high income crops. In line with this activity the full implementation of RA 10089 or the Philippine Rubber Research Institute and the passage of the Bill creating the Philippine Palm Oil Research Institute each to start with an amount appropriation of not less than P500 million/year. Provide considerable fund to help small landholders access planting materials of hybrid oil palm and hybrid rubber trees and provide adequate technology generation and dissemination support.
- Increase considerable the government allocation for R & D in agriculture commensurate to the challenges and opportunity of the time – four times or more of the current allocations. Funds adequately the massive development of high caliber S & T and managerial manpower in commercial tree crops farming particularly in oil palm and rubber. UPLB, USM and some selected universities in the country should be equipped with adequate and best manpower and adequate R & D funding resources matching what neighboring countries are providing their agricultural research centers and universities.
- VII. SUGGESTIONS TO BUSINESS LEADERS
Some successful business leaders expressed desire to help solve the
current problems of the country – high incidence of poverty and
unemployment. Their assistance to liberate a landed but poor farmer or
an IPs (indigenous peoples) can make big differences. It is not a
difficult and expensive assistance. Just provide a farmer with quality
hybrid planting materials of rubber or oil palm and small amount for
land preparation and planting all to cost not more than P50,000/ha and
at one time, in a year of planting. Provide him the resources to
integrate food crops – cassava, vegetables, rice and corn while waiting
for the tree crop to mature in three to five years. In five years the
income from the 2.5 ha farm is expected to be above the poverty
threshold level. Such has been proven in adjacent countries. It is
being done with astonishing by many LGUs on limited scale due to limited
fund in the provinces of Cotabato, Maguindanao, Bukdnon and Sultan
Kudarat. Properly cared rubber and oil palm of 2.5 or more ha are
capable of providing higher income for a farmer to buy enough food for
his family, buy manufactures goods – TV, refrigerators, cars, built a
concrete house and support his children to college. A businessman can
start with few farmers others with great philanthropic hearts can start
with hundreds if not thousands of farmers, thus contributing to a strong
Philippine economy.