ORMOC CITY,
Leyte, April 6 (PNA) – The poverty rate in Eastern Visayas has worsened after
super typhoon Yolanda. This was learned from the poverty situationer shared by
the National Development Economic Authority during an agrarian reform forum on
Tuesday.
According to
Annielyn Constiniano, NEDA economic development specialist, the poverty
situation in the region has gone worse in the past four years.
From 41.4
percent in 2006, poverty incidence among its population went up to 43.8 percent
in 2009, 45.12 percent in 2012 and 47.3 percent last year.
Based on the
2012 Regional Social and Economic Trends, children are the most poor among nine
basic sectors at 50.8 percent followed by farmers (46.7 percent) and fishermen
(45.7 percent).
The high
poverty incidence has affected the region’s economic performance. In fact,
Eastern Visayas has not met its Gross Regional Domestic Product (GRDP) target
of 6-7 percent for the past 10 years as its average growth rate for 2004-2014
was a modest 2 percent. Its highest growth rate was 5.8 percent in 2004.
Eastern
Visayas’ worst GRDP rate was -6.2 percent in 2012 as a result of the six-month
shutdown of Philippine Associated Smelting and Refining Corp. which for
Constiniano is not good as it shows that the region’s economy is highly
dependent in just one company.
It also
shows that the local economy is dominated by the industry sector at 45 percent
followed by services at 35 percent, then agriculture, hunting fishing and
forestry (AHFF) at only 20 percent. This is also not a healthy indicator
considering that majority of the region’s workers are in the services (48
percent) and AHFF (38 percent) sectors where unemployment is high while
industry employs only 14 percent.
In 2013,
Eastern Visayas registered the third lowest agricultural productivity rate at
only P58,607.76 per hectare.
Constiniano
attributed this to the region’s vulnerability to disasters, high cost of farm
inputs and underutilized lands. To fix the problem, she called on the farmers
to make their lands productive.
“Let us not
leave our lands uncultivated. There are many strategies taught by government to
make farms more productive. Intercropping has been introduced to coconut
farmers,” she said.
Constiniano
chided beneficiaries of the Department of Agrarian Reform (DAR) and
non-government organizations (NGO) who put to waste the assistance they
received.
“There are
those who do not utilize properly the lands given by Dar and assistance
provided by different agencies. Let’s not waste the assistance extended to us
not only by the government but by NGOs as well. Some farmer-beneficiaries opt
to sell the lands awarded them to the original owners,” she said. (PNA)
LAP/SQM/FELIX N. CODILLA/EGR
LAP/SQM/FELIX N. CODILLA/EGR
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