“ACPC Financial Services?” – Good! “Farmers’ “Financial Management?” – Bad!
If you know what you need to do, you will keep doing it.
On page 119 of the coffee-table book The Filipino Farmer Is Bankable, the volume I produced for
the Agricultural Credit Policy Council (ACPC) to celebrate its Silver
Anniversary on 25 April 2012, can be found these entries:
Vision
The ACPC is the institution on agri credit policy and program development that
promotes sustainable and effective delivery of financial services in the
countryside.
Mission
To develop and advocate agri credit policies and orchestrate programs that
would promote farmers’ and fishers’ access to sustained financial services.
9 years later, on the ACPC website, ACPC.gov.ph, word-for-word the exact same Vision and Mission
Statements[1] appear.
What does that signify?
To
me, it shows that the ACPC, after clearly defining its role in the nationwide
development of PH Agriculture as an agency of the Department
of Agriculture
(DA), has remained steadfast in its institutional commitments. I find that
unusual for any DA agency – and I must congratulate the ACPC for institutional clarity,
commitment, and concretization!
Note that ACPC’s Vision is two-pronged: (a) development of sustainable policies & programs on
agri credit, and (b) effective delivery
of financial services to the countryside.
Other agencies may mention the word “sustainable” in their
public statements and in the news reports emanating from them, but “sustainability”
is seldom mentioned and even more seldom measured in their activities.
I
am referring to the sustainability of the enterprise of the small farmer. The
Filipino farmers are historically non-viable or non-economically sound, and it
will take a long time for the DA, even with the outstanding Team Captainship of
Secretary of Agriculture William Dar, to
help their business become
economically viable, not to mention their farming environmentally sound.
“Your credit is good, but we need cash” is a sign in many a
Pinoy variety store. The great majority of Pinoy farmers are always in need of
cash because they do not manage their financial resources, relying on the Fast Cash of the moneylender,
notwithstanding the charge of 20% for any loan. Always on Fast Cash, the farmer
pays over-the-counter for his seeds, fertilizers, and pesticides – and these
are his major expenses.
What
to do? All farmer trainings, actual
or virtual, have to be overhauled and designed with financial management inputted
from beginning to end.
Here are instances for farmers to practice financial
management:
Loans – Be a member of
a cooperative; you will enjoy affordable loans.
Seeds – (1) Buy the variety appropriate to the season and field, with recorded
high yield. (2) Sow only 20 kg of expensive hybrid seeds to grow seedlings for
transplanting, not 40-50 kg.
Fertilizers – Do not over-fertilize.
Pesticides – Do not over-spray. Better, practice multiple cropping or trap
cropping, zero pesticides.
Marketing – Your cooperative will sell your produce when the price is right!
The ACPC is for Financial
Services and can only do so much. The farmer himself must be taught Financial Management, and this is the
duty of those public & private trainers of farmers.
Now
then, business-minded farmers, may their tribe increase!@517
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