Showing posts with label Agriculture sector. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Agriculture sector. Show all posts

Wednesday, September 12, 2012

Farmers Face Shortage of Irrigation for Improved Rice Production

Cambodian farmers cut rice at a rice paddy farm during the harvest season at Sala Kumrou, Puresat province.

The low income made by many farmers in Battambang has forced young men to seek work as migrant labor in Thailand.

11 September 2012
Theara Khoun, VOA Khmer

BATTAMBANG - As Cambodia seeks to improve its production of rice, farmers in the fertile province of Battambang say they need more irrigation, more training and more equipment to boost their yields.

“I’ve never seen any local authorities or NGOs visit my rice field or teach me about farming techniques, not even once,” said Hun Pes, 84, as he pumped water into his rice field. “I just get information from other villagers or hear it on the radio.”

Hun Pes said he can cultivate rice up to three times a year, for up to 7 metric tons of rice per hectare. Like other villagers, he then sells his rice harvest to middlemen from Vietnam or Thailand, who buy directly from farmers in their fields. He sells his rice for about $330 per ton. “They normally offer the same price as local buyers,” he said.

Tuesday, July 17, 2012

China provides largest loan to Cambodia for agriculture, irrigation development [... right after the ASEAN FM meeting fiasco]

PHNOM PENH, July 17 (Xinhua) -- China is the largest provider of financial assistance to Cambodia for agriculture and irrigation development in the last three years, Cambodia's Minister of Finance Keat Chhon said here on Tuesday.

Since 2010 to date, he said, Cambodia has received a total loan of 561 million U.S. dollars and a total grant of 22 million U.S. dollars from South Korea, India, China, Japan and France.

"Of the amount, China's soft loan to Cambodia is 436 million U.S. dollars," he said in an economic conference at the National Assembly. "We show that China is playing very important role to promote Cambodia's agricultural development and irrigation system construction."

The minister said that besides, Cambodia also received the loan of 88 million U.S. dollars from the Asian Development Bank, and 24. 2 million U.S. dollar loan and 17.5 million U.S. dollar grant from the International Fund for Agricultural Development.

Saturday, June 18, 2011

Bangladesh, Cambodia to tie up for agri sector cooperation

Saturday June 18 2011
Syful Islam
The Financial Express (Bangladesh)

Bangladesh is set to tie up with Cambodia for promoting investment and development co-operation in agricultural sector aiming to raise food grain production through taking some of the latter's land on lease, officials said.

The Prime Minister of the South-East Asian nation Hun Sen is scheduled to visit Dhaka soon when the two countries are expected to sign a number of deals on bilateral cooperation, mainly on farming, the officials added.

"The major cooperation will be in the agricultural sector as food shortage-stricken Bangladesh seeks to take land on lease from Cambodia to produce rice there and bring the same back to meet local demand," a senior commerce ministry official told the FE.

During Hun Sen's visit, the two countries will form a joint commission at the foreign ministers' level, sign a deal for holding annual advisory meetings at the foreign secretary-level and tie up for bilateral cooperation in the agricultural sector.

Wednesday, May 11, 2011

Understanding of climate change sketchy, but concern real

Tuesday, May 10th, 2011
IPS

The rains were kind to Cambodian farmer Tep Van last year, when the monsoon season doused his land with enough water to soak his fields and grow his precious rice crop. But he’s not sure he can count on the same luck this year.

In the past, we didn’t have to worry about the weather,” Van said, standing beside his field several kilometres outside the Cambodian capital, Phnom Penh. “But lately, it’s been a big problem.”

A few seasons ago, the rains were scarce. His parched crop withered without the moisture; nearly one-third of his seedlings didn’t make it to harvest.

Such patterns of irregular, unpredictable weather are what many climate scientists believe to be the effects of climate change. One season, there might be drought when rains should have fallen. The next, there could be more rain than the fields could handle.

Monday, March 28, 2011

Corn on the Cambodian cob suits Korean farmer

Lee Woo-chang, head of KomerCN, examines corns grown at his farm in Cambodia. (Photo: Provided by the company)



March 28, 2011
By Lim Mi-jin, Limb Jae-un
Joong Ang Daily (South Korea)

Lee Woo-chang, 42, set up a farming company called KomerCN in Cambodia back in December 2008 to grow corn. Lee started out small. His initial farm was on 21 hectares (51.89 acres) of land in Wiwalton Village, Kampong Speu Province. However, he wants to expand the farm to 13,000 hectares.

Lee also formed a corn agricultural cooperative with 1,400 Cambodian farmers who are cultivating 7,000 hectares of land. Lee plans to purchase all the corn produced by the cooperative and export it to Korea, which is heavily dependent on corn imports.

According to Lee, it will be one of the first times that Korea has imported corn from a Korean-managed overseas farm.

Lee is in talks with Daesang, a major local food producer, for the Cambodian corn supplies. “If the corn is tested to be safe from toxins or molds, it may happen,” Lee said.

Thursday, March 24, 2011

SRP Policy on Agriculture

23 March 2011
Source: SRP

This morning, the SRP launched its agriculture policy at a press conference where MP Son Chhay, who led the policy study team, explained in details on how survey were conducted before the policy can be drawn. The next two issues to be studied by SRP are Health and Employment.

SRP Policy on Agriculture
http://www.scribd.com/doc/51419131/SRP-Policy-on-Agriculture

SRP Policy on Agriculture (English)
http://www.scribd.com/doc/51419395/SRP-Policy-on-Agriculture-English

Sunday, March 20, 2011

More boosting needed to prop the SAGGING cooperation with Big Brother Hanoi: now it's about agriculture

Vietnam, Cambodia boost agricultural cooperation

20/03/2011
VOV News/VNA (Hanoi)

Vietnam and Cambodia will jointly implement some 20 cooperative projects in agricultural science and technology, quarantine, forestry and seafood with a total investment of nearly VND365 billion (over US$17 million) from 2011-2020.

The Ministry of Agriculture and Rural Development said it will work with the Cambodian Ministry of Agriculture, Forestry and Seafood on the signing of a government-level agreement on growing 300,000 ha of rubber and industrial trees in Cambodia.

The two sides will strengthen cooperation in plant protection and veterinary as well as discuss measures to prevent the spreading of epidemics through borders.

Tuesday, January 18, 2011

Agriculture Ministry Issues Guidelines for Export to China

Chun Sakada, VOA Khmer
Phnom Penh Tuesday, 18 January 2011
"The guidelines will help reduce poverty in rural areas by increasing their export potential."
The Ministry of Agriculture on Tuesday began circulating a new procedure for the export of rice and cassava to China, in an effort to bring cleaner and higher-quality production to meet import requirements.

The new guidelines focus on the elimination of insects, hygiene standards, proper documentation and other requirements for export to China.

Kith Seng, an undersecretary of state for the Ministry of Agriculture, said the new circular was meant to "protect Cambodia's interest" as well as its trade partner in accordance with an export agreement signed between the two countries last year.

Saturday, October 17, 2009

Salesian Missions Planning Two New Agricultural Schools in Cambodia

World Food Day and new United Nations report highlight need for such programs
"Investing in agriculture in developing countries is key as a healthy agricultural sector is essential not only to overcome hunger and poverty, but also to ensure overall economic growth and peace and stability in the world"
New Rochelle, NY (Vocus/PRWEB) October 16, 2009 -- Salesian Missions has announced it is in the planning stages to open two new agricultural schools in Cambodia next year, just as World Food Day and a new report from the United Nations highlight the need for such programs.

"Investing in agriculture in developing countries is key as a healthy agricultural sector is essential not only to overcome hunger and poverty, but also to ensure overall economic growth and peace and stability in the world," said Josette Sheeran, executive director of the World Food Program, in an Oct. 14 United Nations press release announcing the economic crisis has lead to a sharp increase in hunger, affecting the world's poorest.

Salesian Missions currently operates more than 90 agricultural schools around the world. The plans for the two new schools in Cambodia - one in Poipet and the other in Battambang - should be in place early next year, according to Matt Welsh, program officer with Salesian Missions. When the schools actually open is largely based on when the necessary funds will be raised, he added (Those interested in finding out how they can help should go to www.FindYourMission.org).

"We are in the process of developing model farms at these two sites, where villagers will be provided relevant training in modern farming methods with the goal of increasing crop yields," said Welsh who oversees specific Salesian Missions programs in Latin America, the Caribbean and Asia.

Like their counterparts in other countries, the agricultural schools will serve youth ages 15 to 20.

"These are young people from marginalized, disadvantaged families, who do not have the resources to send their kids to school otherwise," said Welsh, who added that the schools are estimated to serve more than 100 students at a time.

"Salesian Missions has provided schools like these all over the developing world," said Welsh. "Not only can they provide skills training, but also food for students and their families."

Salesian Missions provides not only educational opportunities in more than 130 countries around the globe, they address core needs. The agricultural schools offer more than just agricultural training - they are often part of a larger program that also offers literacy education and other vocational training, in addition to feeding programs for hungry children.

"The core of our mission is to provide educational opportunities to the poorest of the poor. When the youth receive training, they stay and contribute to the local economy and the needs of their communities," said Welsh. "This delivers benefits for years after they leave our institute."

Salesians have been operating vocational training programs around the world for nearly 150 years and were invited by the Cambodian government in 1991 to establish a vocational training institute in Phnom Penh.

ABOUT SALESIAN MISSIONS: Salesian Missions is headquartered in New Rochelle, NY. The mission of the U.S.-based nonprofit Catholic organization is to raise funds for its international programs that serve youth and families in poor communities around the globe. The Salesian missionaries are made up of priests, brothers and sisters, as well as laypeople - all dedicated to caring for poor children throughout the world in more than 130 countries, helping young people become self-sufficient by learning a trade that will help them gain employment. To date, more than 3 million youth have received services funded by Salesian Missions. These services and programs are provided to children regardless of race or religion. To date, more than 5 million Americans have contributed financially to this work. For more information, go to www.salesianmissions.org.

SALESIAN MISSIONS
2 LEFEVRE LANE, NEW ROCHELLE, NY 10801

CONTACT:
Hannah Gregory
207-512-2407

Wednesday, August 12, 2009

Cambodia Has to Cope With its Global Connection

Global misery: Cambodian women workers, who once benefited from foreign orders for garments, are now facing unemployment. (Photo: Anne-Laure Porée)

Once the poster child for the benefits of globalization, Cambodia is now being asked to cope with its darker side in the aftermath of the financial crisis. The four pillars of the country’s economy – tourism, garment-making, construction, and agriculture – are feeling the global pinch in their various ways, writes journalist Anne-Laure Porée. Tourism is down thanks to the global stay-at-home vacation trend. Garment-making has collapsed due to lower US demand and choosey shoppers. Construction, like the rest of the world, plummeted with knock-on effects in consumer banking as rising unemployment led to greater personal loan defaults. Even agriculture, which could still provide positive growth in 2009, faces the uncertainty of weather and the challenges of foreign investment choking off local farmers. Perhaps the only ray of light is the natural resource industry – a sector that has long promised to provide limited value-added components to the economy. The sad part of this story is that the government seems content to wait for a rebound in the global economy, hoping the rising tide abroad will lift Cambodia’s boat. But as Porée notes, to integrate fully into the world economy, Cambodia has to learn how to be more than a supplier of garments based on cheap labor. – YaleGlobal

Waiting for a rebound, Cambodia needs to be more than dressmaker to the world

11 August 2009
By Anne-Laure Porée
YaleGlobal


PHNOM PENH: Defying the gloom descending on the tourism sector brought about by the global crisis, the capital’s airport recently launched a hopeful initiative: a new airline. Cambodia Angkor Air was launched to boost tourism between the capital and Siem Reap near the famed ruins of Angkor Wat. With tourist arrivals falling sharply since late last year, this may signal a triumph of hope over reality. If anything, the hopes and fears surrounding Cambodia’s tourist revenue and garment trade underline how the fortune of the country has become intertwined with the larger world.

Since peace came to Cambodia in the last years of the last century, the country has emerged as a poster child of globalization in Southeast Asia. In the middle of this decade, Cambodia enjoyed double digit growth and even hoisted itself up to 6th place in the rank of the fastest growing economies for the 1998-2007 period.

And now the country is experiencing the downside of dependence on the world. The sectors most affected by the crisis – tourism and garment export – are the ones that have seen the most development thanks to the integration of Cambodia into the global economy a decade ago, after peace was restored in the country. At this time, the economy was opened to foreign investors, who poured money into the garment industry, taking advantage of supports granted to Cambodia such as the Most Favored Nation (MFN) and the Generalized System of Preferences (GSP). This status provided access to the American market and it enabled other Asian investors – Chinese in particular – to get round their own quotas or the Least Developed Country status conferred upon them by the United Nations.

But the happy days are now threatened by the shrinking world market. Of the four major pillars of Cambodian economy – the garment industry, tourism, construction and agriculture – three are seriously impaired by the global crisis. With 70 percent of Cambodia’s garment production going to the US, the declining American economy, choosey shoppers and stay-at-home tourists have led to job losses in Cambodia.

The figures released in late July by the Garment Manufacturers Association of Cambodia (GMAC) showed a worse than anticipated loss: exports dropped almost 30 percent and one garment worker in 6 lost her job in the first six months of 2009. Most of these workers are women who transfer a substantial part of their earnings to their family living in rural areas in order to supplement farming-based incomes. In some villages, every family has one or several members working in the garment factories based in the Phnom Penh suburbs. Some go for unpaid leaves or part time jobs, some enter prostitution, but most decide to go back to their village in order to work in the rice fields.

According to Van Sou Ieng, GMAC president, Cambodia is much more severely affected by the crisis than other Asian countries like Indonesia, Vietnam, Bangladesh or China because the industry sector in Cambodia is less competitive. “We need more time to produce than China or Vietnam,” he says. Though the government helps with profit tax exemptions or export charge reductions, there’s no miracle cure for Ieng.

Tourism – the second pillar of the economy – has suffered from the economic crisis, and the fallout from the swine flu. In Siem Reap, located next to the famed Angkor temples, a spot visited by more than 1 million tourists in 2008, the situation is described as “catastrophic” by hotel managers. The hotels’ occupancy rate has fallen 25 percent compared to the same period in 2008. Several three or four star hotels have definitely closed their doors, and the mid-range hotels have been multiplying promotional offers for months.

The drop in Western tourists’ arrivals (down 14 percent during the four first months of 2009 according to the Minister of Tourism) has a direct impact on tourism generated incomes – foreigners spent 1.6 billion dollars in 2008. The Ministry of Economy and Finance expects a drop in tourism growth of 7 to 8 percent this year.

The construction sector is also affected: many foreign investors have delayed, reduced or slowed their projects. The capital Phnom Penh started to change face in 2008 with the building of huge towers, business centers and shopping malls but activity slid in the second half of 2008, leaving workers without employment. Such trends have had significant consequences, particularly among the banking sector. The Acleda bank, which has the largest branch network in all provinces, reported a fall in profits in the second quarter of 2009 because of late payments and less lending. The Cambodians, who speculated on land as investment, are now facing difficulties because the prices of land and real estate have plunged and they can’t sell and get cash.

The hardest hit, of course, are the poorest of the poor who count each riel. For them, any drop in income, as well as any unexpected crisis, immediately results in cutting down the number of meals per day.

Agriculture, the fourth pillar of the Cambodian economy and the least exposed to global currents, could bolster the country’s 2009 growth, which is forecast at 2.1 percent. The agricultural sector (with 4.3 percent growth expected in 2009 depending on weather conditions) is essentially based on rice farming and fishing.

But the part of agriculture that has drawn foreign interest proves to be a mixed blessing.

In northeastern Mondolkiri province, plans by a French company to set up a rubber plantation have created a conflict that symbolizes the double edged sword of globalization. For several months, Bunong, a Montagnards ethnic group, has been fighting against the project – as their farmland gets swallowed up by the rubber company that has an agreement with the Cambodian government. The company is expected to make huge profits, a part of which could return to the community via the salaries of the plantation workers and the development of a new city.

The crisis has forced the government to pay attention to those left behind by globalization. “We thought that the private sector could solve every problem but we have to reconsider the role to be played by the State in order to palliate the deficiencies of the market,” says Hang Chuon Naron, Secretary General of the Ministry of Economy and Finance.

The crisis has also led the leader of political opposition Sam Rainsy, former Economy Minister, to call for injecting government funds into the economy and for pushing reforms, in particular against endemic corruption. But the government would rather let the storm blow over, waiting for growth to come back in developed countries, hopefully pulling the country out of its recession in the process.

In the meantime, some hopes turn to the mineral, oil and gas resources development. But the revenues from these productions will be mainly derived from exports of raw materials with no local added value, whereas imports of manufactured goods will increase. Even after growth returns, Cambodia will still have to figure out how to hitch its industry to the global economy profitably rather than be a supplier of garments produced by cheap labor. Cambodia is beginning to learn the challenge of being part of an integrated world.

Anne-Laure Porée is a journalist based in Phnom Penh. She can be reached at
alporee@hotmail.com
.

Wednesday, July 16, 2008

Cambodia turns Killing Fields into agricultural success [... even though farmers are losing their lands due to land-grabbing?]

Jul 15, 2008
DPA

Phnom Penh - Images of a country desolated by the Khmer Rouge, an entire population put to work in the rice fields and yet dying by the hundreds of thousands of starvation, still haunts Cambodia.

But since the ultra-Maoist's disastrous drive from 1975 to 1979 to turn the country into an agrarian utopia bereft of markets, money and technology, Cambodia has quietly picked itself up and is poised to become one of the major rice exporters in the region, experts said.

From the dismal postwar years, Cambodia has steadily rebuilt its irrigation systems, developed its technology and slowly but surely reclaimed thousands of hectares of rice fields from land mines.

'Cambodia will become a major rice exporter,' Agriculture Minister Chan Sarun said. 'We achieved food security in 1995, and last year, as well as self-sufficiency, we had 2 million tons left over for exports.

'We currently have 2.5 million hectares under rice cultivation, but we expect to increase that to 3 million.

Cambodia's rice producers and millers are optimistic about their future, and this year, Cambodia even sold subsidized rice to African countries, including Guinea, as a humanitarian gesture.

So confident is Cambodia of being able to hold its own with the big regional rice players in the future that Prime Minister Hun Sen has been a key proponent of a proposed regional rice cartel similar to that of the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries.

Thailand's brainchild, the proposed Organization of Rice Exporting Countries, was aimed at protecting the region's major rice producers but has deeply concerned major importers, such as the Philippines, which said it would only benefit major producers.

Phou Puy, president of the Cambodian National Rice Millers Association, said new growing techniques, rice strains and irrigation projects could potentially double the country's rice crop by 2015.

'With these changes, Cambodia's traditional one-time-per-year harvest can increase to two, even three times a year,' Phou Puy said. 'By 2015, that could provide exports of 10 million tons.

'Currently, we stand at between 2 [million] to 5 million tons, depending on weather conditions,' he said.

The 2015 projection would have Cambodia matching neighbouring Thailand's export predictions for 2008. Thailand is currently the world's largest rice exporter.

Cambodia is increasingly also becoming a player in biofuel production, but Phou Puy denied that that development would put to use land that could be planted for rice.

Vast industrial farms have sprung up on the north-western border with Thailand, producing corn and soybeans, and jatropha, which is endemic to Cambodia and a prime source of biodiesel, now takes up hundreds of hectares.

'But these crops grow where rice doesn't, so they do not impact on our rice yield,' Phou Puy said. 'I have no doubt Cambodia has the potential to match or surpass our rice-producing neighbours.

Such a development would be a major achievement not only for the country but also for donors who have poured billions of dollars into Cambodia's agricultural sector.

While China has been a key donor for irrigation development, alongside others including the Asian Development Bank, Australia has led the way in Cambodia's technological and scientific advances, funding research and development projects.

The Cambodian Agricultural Research and Development Institute has benefited from millions of dollars in Australian aid and in return has been integral in developing new strains of rice, more resistant to the whims of climate change and the ravages of insects.

The institute's mission is to educate individual growers in a country where the bulk of people involved in agriculture work on mostly small family plots.

These sorts of measures have been so successful that Chan Sarun envisages a second lucrative niche market in organic rice, which demands a higher price but costs farmers less to produce because they don't use expensive fertilizers and pesticides.

'Organic rice is very popular,' the minister said. 'We aim to reduce chemical fertilizer use step by step. The world prefers natural food, so we are moving in that direction.

Mechanization will not come overnight, and experts agreed the days of Cambodia's rice farmers plodding patiently behind a plough pulled by cows or buffalo were not numbered.

But they said simple techniques with the right cropping, strains and a guaranteed water supply might one day take Cambodia to the top of the region in producing one of the world's most precious staples.

Tuesday, May 20, 2008

CAMBODIA: Poor farmers hit by high cost of fertiliser

A school-feeding programme near Siem Reap. According to WFP, an estimated 2.6 million Cambodians live in extreme poverty and face food deprivation (Photo: WFP Cambodia)

PHNOM PENH, 19 May 2008 (IRIN) - The spiralling cost of fertiliser is affecting up to half of Cambodia's two million farmers, including Lam Leng, a 30-year-old farmer from Kompong Speu Province, who told IRIN how he had been forced to collect fruit from palm sugar trees to feed his impoverished family.

The price of food is soaring, but he is particularly hard-hit by the cost of inputs for his crop. Leng is desperate. The cost of fertiliser has doubled, the father of five said, which meant he was unable this planting season to afford chemical fertiliser to tend his one-hectare rice paddy.

"If I don't use fertiliser, I don't get a good yield of rice," he said. With his rice field dry and infertile, Leng said it was necessary for his wife to seek work at a garment factory where she earns US$50 a month labouring long days stitching clothing. But even with that additional income, the Leng family can only just make ends meet. Lam Leng said pork and beef were just a distant memory, and he was scavenging for crabs and frogs in the rice fields to add protein to his family's diet.

Yaing Saing Koma, executive director of the Cambodian Center for Study and Development in Agriculture, told IRIN that approximately 50 percent of Cambodia's estimated two million farmers have been badly affected by the soaring price of fertiliser.

"Small farmers need loans so that they can afford fertiliser," he said, adding that if the price of rice remained high, the farmers could, perhaps, break even.

The introduction of better seeds and modern technology could increase their rice yields from two to three tonnes per hectare, Yaing Saing Koma said, adding that increased yields also depended on the fertility of the soil.

In Cambodia, 78 percent of the country's 2.5 million hectares of agricultural land is used for rice production and about 6 percent for fruit and vegetables. Another 16 percent is planted with grains, rubber and other crops, agricultural officials said.

2.6 million Cambodians in extreme poverty

According to a 2006 analysis by the World Food Programme's Food Policy Research Institute, an estimated 2.6 million Cambodians live in extreme poverty and face food deprivation due to the poor management of agricultural resources.

About 40km west of Phnom Penh, the capital, in Kompong Speu Province's Samraong Tong commune, farmers are spreading cow dung they have collected throughout the year over their rice fields in the hope it will nurture a better harvest. These subsistence farmers say they have been forced to reduce their reliance on chemical fertiliser because of the sky-rocketing cost. But while the cow dung is useful, they worry that the harvest will be far smaller than in previous years when they were able to afford chemical fertiliser.

Por Bien, a 55-year-old farmer, who works a 1.5 hectare piece of land, told IRIN that it was difficult for him to afford even several sacks of fertiliser for his rice field. One bag cost $20 last year, he said, but has now doubled to more than $40.

"Fertiliser is very expensive, how can we earn enough money to buy it?" Por Bien asked while carrying great heaps of cow dung to his field.

Kith Seng, director of the Agriculture Ministry's Statistics and Planning Department, said the government had no funds to provide fertiliser or seed rice to impoverished farmers except when their rice fields had been affected by natural disasters, such as drought and flooding. He added that farmers should have collected more manure to safeguard against their inability to purchase chemical fertiliser.

"The farmers have to use more cow dung instead," Kith Seng said.

Saturday, April 05, 2008

Hun Sen: Agriculture Key to Reducing Poverty

By Heng Reaksmey, VOA Khmer
Original report from Phnom Penh
04 April 2008


Prime Minister Hun Sen on Thursday told officials at the Ministry of Agriculture that growth in their traditional sector was the key to raising millions of Cambodians out of poverty.

"Agricultural development is a main point to reduce poverty in Cambodia, and I expect this year Cambodia will have only 30 percent under the poverty line," Hun Sen said, speaking at a closing ceremony of an annual agricultural conference in Phnom Penh.

Ministry officials and economists said Friday the sector was important for poverty reduction.

The government should work to promote agriculture to improve Cambodia's economy, one economist said, but it should not rely completely on one sector.

In 2007 economic earnings from rice paddy grew 50.8 percent and for other crops between 4 percent and 8 percent, Agriculture Minister Chan Sarun said Friday.

But while agriculture has the potential to reduce Cambodian poverty, said Kang Chandararath, an economist and director of the Cambodia Institute of Development Studies, the government must ensure enough land for people to grow crops.

Friday, February 01, 2008

The key to poverty reduction: Agriculture

Friday, February 1, 2008
By Ky Soklim
Cambodge Soir Hebdo

Translated from French by Luc Sâr

During the presentation of a report on development and agriculture, the stress was put on the importance to develop this sector in order to help the country get out of poverty.

The 2008 world report on the development was presented on Thursday 31 January in Phnom Penh. The working session brought together the ministry of Agriculture, Forestry and Fishery led by Chan Sarun, as well as Derek Byerlee and Maria Paula Savanti, the authors of the report. The work stresses on the link between agriculture and development.

Cambodia bets a lot the agriculture sector. “The policy of our government is such that it helps the economic growth and contributes to the reduction of poverty,” Chan Sarun explained. In fact, if during the course of the last decade, the rate of poverty decreases thanks to an average yearly growth of 7.8%, this decrease was not equal throughout the country. Cities saw a poverty decrease of 16% in terms on number of people living with less than one dollar per day – this decrease reaches 23% in Phnom Penh – however, in rural areas, the decrease of poverty is only 9.5%.

Hang Chourn Naronn, the secretary-general of the ministry of Economy and Finance, believes that the development of agriculture is essential: “It must be a necessary element in the strategy to reduce poverty. In the province, people depend a lot on it: on average, 63% of their income comes from the [agriculture] sector.”

80% of Cambodians live on agriculture. In 2007, this sector represents 26.8% of the GDP of the kingdom. According to the World Bank, its growth rate must stabilize around 4% to yield a general growth of 7%, in order to abide by the millennium objectives set for poverty reduction.