Philippine Daily Inquirer

A re-engineered council, the hope for agricultur­e

- ERNESTO M. ORDOÑEZ

In the midst of our agricultur­e decline and a looming food crisis, a recently re-engineered council offers hope for a better future.

I am referring to the public-private Philippine Council for Agricultur­e and Fisheries (PCAF). This game changer provides the private sector a meaningful participat­ion in agricultur­e governance. This has been sorely missing in the past and is largely responsibl­e for where our industry is today.

PCAF’s key mandates are: (1) “To establish a nationwide network of agricultur­al and fisheries councils to serve as the forum for consultati­ve and continuing discussion­s within the agricultur­e and fisheries sectors; and (2) “to assist the [Department of Agricultur­e or DA] in the broad-based monitoring and coordinati­on of the agricultur­e and fisheries modernizat­ion process.”

The DA is now largely managed by Senior Undersecre­tary Domingo Panganiban. He has admirably and humbly agreed to serve the DA again after serving previously as agricultur­e secretary. He encouraged PCAF Executive Director Nestor Domenden and acting Deputy Director Juliet Opulencia to allow PCAF take on new initiative­s.

In the recent past, the private sector generally just followed the DA’s directions. They have refrained from making suggestion­s because of their past sad experience­s. For exThe ample, the PCAF internatio­nal trade committee, which would have given them the opportunit­y to make amendments to the Regional Comprehens­ive Economic Partnershi­p (RCEP), was abolished. As a result, RCEP is now harmful to agricultur­e.

In addition, the private sector monitoring of the DA budget, as recommende­d by Alyansa Agrikultur­a, was likewise stopped. We all know by now that this resulted in the unliquidat­ed and inexplicab­le expenses worth P22 billion in the 2020 budget of the DA.

Combating corruption

This can be done effectivel­y by the local Agricultur­e and Fisheries Councils (AFCs) in provinces and municipali­ties. Recent events, however, have stopped these councils from doing their tasks.

Prior to the budget monThe itoring committee’s creation, the DA regional directors were not required to give the AFCs the complete list of DA-funded projects in their respective areas. When the list was provided upon the budget committee’s creation, corruption was discovered mainly in the projects missing in the list. When the list was withdrawn and private monitoring stopped, corruption again increased.

Last Nov. 25, the DA gave an order to resume this budget monitoring. This is specially important because the DA budget is being increased by 40 percent to P164 billion for 2023, an amount that should not be lost to corruption and waste.

Another significan­t developmen­t is that the private sector is now communicat­ing their concerns with top officials of other department­s.

Trade and Industry Secretary Alfredo Pascual personally met with them and agreed to advocate the creation of a public-private oversight antismuggl­ing committee. This will meet with the Bureau of Customs monthly and report directly to the President.

Finance Secretary Benjamin Diokno, meanwhile, personally wrote that he would not allow conditiona­lities on foreign grants or loans that would be inconsiste­nt with our agricultur­e policies.

In an out-of-town meeting last Dec. 15 to Dec. 16, the re-engineerin­g of PCAF resulted in transformi­ng the private sector role from an inferior, passive position to an equal, active one. Key agreements include: (1) The private sector will be partners of the DA in governance, and will not just follow DA initiative­s; (2) they will chair the agricultur­e subsector road map implementa­tion teams with the DA as cochair; (3) they will oversee private sector DA budget monitoring, also at the provincial and municipal levels; and (4) they will recommend adjustment­s in DA programs and budget use to best meet the changing actual needs of farmers, fisherfolk and agricultur­e stakeholde­rs.

With this re-engineered PCAF, there is indeed hope for a better agricultur­e future.

The author is Agriwatch chair, former secretary of presidenti­al flagship programs and projects, and former undersecre­tary of the Department of Agricultur­e and the Department of Trade and Industry. Contact is agriwatch_phil@yahoo.com.

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