PH Land Reform – Mind Reform Instead Of Distribution Reform
Truth to tell, PH land reform has never progressed beyond distribution of land – because the distribution of land is bad! So now we have many landowners, but no successful farmer from among the beneficiaries.
Small
isn’t beautiful!
Is it because of the stupidity of the authors of the law –
or the stupidity of the farmers? Neither. It’s the stupidity of some economists!
In his column in BusinessWorld,
Raul V Fabella says the Department of Finance, DoF, the National Economic and
Development Authority. NEDA, and Congress are “contesting how best to reverse
the economic free-fall wrought by the COVID-19 pandemic lockdown.” The DoF and
NEDA believe that the best way is to grant private corporate income tax deduction,
to give them “breathing space,” from 30% down to 25%. Economists are hoping
that the tax savings will be converted by private firms into new investments,
new jobs. Similarly, Congress wants “to create jobs by ramping up state
infrastructure spending.”
It happened in the USA, when Franklin Delano Roosevelt was President:
Realistically, it is
only demand-pulling stimulus mounted by a welfare-oriented… government that
could arrest the negative feedback loop of a free fall. Classical economists
were horrified by Keynes’ heretical position: “What? Pay people to dig holes in
the ground only to refill them?” asked detractors. President FD Roosevelt initiated
the New Deal along Keynes’ lines: hired idled workers to replant America’s
forests, build dams and roadways, and this pushed back the crisis.
Thank you President Roosevelt! After this pandemic, with our
idled workers we will replant devastated Philippine forests, build dams and
roadways.
But right now, I’m more interested in agriculture than
infrastructure. I don’t know why but no economist, not even Mr Fabella, talks
about economies of scale.
The
main trouble with CARP farmers is that they do not consolidate their
operations, so they do not enjoy economies of scale.
For farmers, land ownership gives you the false impression
that you should be doing things on your own. They have to change their minds!
I don’t blame the farmers. I graduated from the UP College
of Agriculture, now UP Los Baños, but I don’t remember a single lesson in farm
consolidation to operate more efficiently with less cost per unit of work done.
No Sir, Mr Fabella, debt condonation will not result in
renewed and better farming – CARP farmers know that they will always remain
poor. You know why? When a farmer wants to buy seeds, fertilizers, pesticides,
he borrows money from a usurer. When harvest comes, he is forced to sell at the
price that the merchant is offering, to pay off his debts.
Rather than debt condonation, I recommend that CARP farmers
in a town be organized into a multi-purpose cooperative. The coop will then be
the source of much cheaper loans, as well as the keeper of farm machines that
everybody can use. The coop can ask financial and other assistances from the Department
of Agriculture under Secretary of Agriculture William Dar.
Then
I’m sure the CARP farmers will rise to the occasion after the pandemic!@517
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