Phnom Penh Post, Issue 15 / 08, April 21 - May 4, 2006
The World Bank's regional update, released in March, attributes Cambodia's high growth rates in 2005 to a dramatic shift in agricultural growth - from minus 2 percent in 2004 to 17 percent in 2005, said Robert Taliercio, World Bank Senior Country Economist.
"What we have seen in 2005 is the volatility of the agricultural sector driving a very high annual growth rate," he said. "High growth in agriculture coupled with better-than-expected performances in the garments sector and tourism, generated a very impressive real GDP growth rate.
"Cambodia's agricultural sector seems to be characterized by a boom-and-bust cycle," he said. "It is a highly erratic sector, it depends mostly on weather conditions."
But a boom-and-bust agricultural growth cycle has negative ramifications for the majority of Cambodia's poor, who rely on agriculture as their primary source of income, said Nisha Agrawal, World Bank Country Manager.
"High fluctuations in agricultural growth rates create a lot of vulnerability for poor people," she said. "A new agricultural policy - linked to an irrigation policy - is urgently needed to point the way forward."
Taliercio said the government is aware steps are needed to ensure growth is sustainable.
"The government has noticed that a lack of rural infrastructure is a major impediment to allowing sustained agricultural development," he said. "[The high growth in agriculture] is good news, is great news, but it is not necessarily sustainable. The question now is how do you make the sector sustainable in terms of growth?"
Developing rural infrastructure, coordinating irrigation projects, and resolving land title disputes were the key steps recommended by the report, and have also been recognized by the government as crucial to achieving sustainable agricultural growth.
"On these three issues it is technical capacity, not political support, which is impeding development," Taliercio said.
The report cited the narrow base of Cambodia's economic growth - garment manufacture, tourism and (sometimes) agriculture - as a cause for concern, with growth rates slowing during 2005 in all sectors save agriculture.
The report highlights areas where improv ement has manifestly been due to improved government policy and performance.
"The growth in tax revenue - from 11.3 percent of GDP [gross domestic product] to 11.7 percent of GDP - is a major achievement," Taliercio said. "It is a result of increasing compliance, and that requires political backing."
The World Bank aims to encourage further government reform, and consequently ties its loans to Cambodia's continued improvement in certain key areas.
Talierco said the World Bank has shifted from "structural adjustment" to the new Poverty Reduction Support Operation (PRSO).
"You will only get reform in areas the government is interested in reforming," he said. "The PRSO is trying to build ownership and work with reformers... We are working to build a common understanding of the goals we are working towards."
"What we have seen in 2005 is the volatility of the agricultural sector driving a very high annual growth rate," he said. "High growth in agriculture coupled with better-than-expected performances in the garments sector and tourism, generated a very impressive real GDP growth rate.
"Cambodia's agricultural sector seems to be characterized by a boom-and-bust cycle," he said. "It is a highly erratic sector, it depends mostly on weather conditions."
But a boom-and-bust agricultural growth cycle has negative ramifications for the majority of Cambodia's poor, who rely on agriculture as their primary source of income, said Nisha Agrawal, World Bank Country Manager.
"High fluctuations in agricultural growth rates create a lot of vulnerability for poor people," she said. "A new agricultural policy - linked to an irrigation policy - is urgently needed to point the way forward."
Taliercio said the government is aware steps are needed to ensure growth is sustainable.
"The government has noticed that a lack of rural infrastructure is a major impediment to allowing sustained agricultural development," he said. "[The high growth in agriculture] is good news, is great news, but it is not necessarily sustainable. The question now is how do you make the sector sustainable in terms of growth?"
Developing rural infrastructure, coordinating irrigation projects, and resolving land title disputes were the key steps recommended by the report, and have also been recognized by the government as crucial to achieving sustainable agricultural growth.
"On these three issues it is technical capacity, not political support, which is impeding development," Taliercio said.
The report cited the narrow base of Cambodia's economic growth - garment manufacture, tourism and (sometimes) agriculture - as a cause for concern, with growth rates slowing during 2005 in all sectors save agriculture.
The report highlights areas where improv ement has manifestly been due to improved government policy and performance.
"The growth in tax revenue - from 11.3 percent of GDP [gross domestic product] to 11.7 percent of GDP - is a major achievement," Taliercio said. "It is a result of increasing compliance, and that requires political backing."
The World Bank aims to encourage further government reform, and consequently ties its loans to Cambodia's continued improvement in certain key areas.
Talierco said the World Bank has shifted from "structural adjustment" to the new Poverty Reduction Support Operation (PRSO).
"You will only get reform in areas the government is interested in reforming," he said. "The PRSO is trying to build ownership and work with reformers... We are working to build a common understanding of the goals we are working towards."
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