A Rice Field in Cavinti, Laguna
Photo file/THEPHILBIZNEWS
A US$370-million loan agreement has been signed between the Philippines and the World Bank for a project that aims to speed up the process of splitting about 1.4 million hectares of land covered by the Comprehensive Agrarian Reform Program (CARP). With this loan, CARP beneficiaries around 750,000 farmers. will be then provided with their individual titles to these parcelized lots.
Finance Secretary Carlos Dominguez III and Mr. Achim Fock, who was then the World Bank’s Acting Country Director for Brunei, Malaysia, Philippines and Thailand, signed the loan agreement last July 14 for the Support to Parcelization of Lands for Individual Titling (SPLIT) Project of the Department of Agrarian Reform (DAR).
“The SPLIT project will improve the bankability of farmers and enable them to access credit and government assistance,” Secretary Dominguez said. “It will support our economic recovery program by intensifying assistance to farmers and making agrarian reform beneficiaries (ARBs) more resilient to the economic and social impacts of the COVID-19 (coronavirus disease 2019) pandemic,” Secretary Dominguez said.
“We truly appreciate the World Bank’s funding support for this initiative designed to make CARP beneficiaries far more productive members of the farm sector, in step with President Duterte’s goal of boosting agricultural productivity and food security, especially at this time of the pandemic, and achieving financial inclusion for all Filipinos,” he added.
Mr. Fock said the World Bank expects the project to encourage ARBs “to invest in their property and adopt better technologies for greater productivity and higher incomes.”
Under the project, the collective certificate of land ownership awards (CCLOAs) will be parcelized into individual titles for some 750,000 ARBs to help fulfill the completion of the decades-old CARP.
The government has redistributed about 4.8 million hectares of land to some 2.8 million ARBs under the agrarian reform program, but only 53 percent were in the form of individual land titles.
The remaining 47 percent or about 2.5 million hectares are CCLOA titles that were issued to groups of ARBs in the 1990s as a temporary measure to fast-track the distribution of land to farmer-beneficiaries.
The parcelization of the CCLOAs into individual titles has been very slow, which is why about 1.4 million hectares remain to be subdivided among farmers under the SPLIT project.
“Through the project, ARBs will be provided security of tenure by way of issuance of individual titles. If ARBs or members of their family fall ill, clear and valid documentation of their property will allow them to mortgage their land, sell, or pass it on to their family members through inheritance,” the Department of Finance (DOF) said.
The total cost of the SPLIT Project is US$473.56 million, of which US$370 million will be funded by the World Bank, while the government will provide the counterpart financing for the balance of US$103.56 Million.
The loan agreement for the project carries a 29-year maturity period, inclusive of a grace period of 10-and-a-half years.