As the 2025 budget approaches, former agriculture minister Vasant Bharath wants to see an improvement for farmers in accessing financing.
The Ministry of Agriculture was allocated $1.442 billion for fiscal 2024, compared to $1.3 billion in 2023.
Out of the allocation, farmers were given $250 million in incentives and $150 million for infrastructure in a bid to shore up food security.
In an interview with the Business Guardian, Bharath said farmers’ access to financing has continued to deteriorate over the last 10 years.
He indicated that many farmers still struggle to get leases that expired 20 and 30 years ago.
Consequently, Bharath said without valid title to land, these farmers cannot access credit.
“As a result, most farmers work on a cash basis, from crop to crop, having to cope with the age-old problems of flooding, drought, infrastructure issues, financing, high input costs, gluts, praedial larceny, and security of tenure. During the period 2010-2015, the Ministry set up several mobile units of the Agricultural Development Bank, that went out to farmers in rural areas to assist with microfinancing, using their crops as collateral,” he explained.
As it pertains to the foreign exchange shortage, Bharath said the sector can be used not just to save forex but also to generate forex.
During the period 2010-2012, under the People’s Partnership, he said the ministry had identified several critical crops to create both food security and food sovereignty (published in the National Food Production Action Plan 2012-2015).
The plan not only identified crops but also production targets. The crops included:
• ↓Staples eg; rice, sweet potatoes, cassava, breadfruit
• ↓Vegetables eg ; tomatoes, peppers, cucumber, pumpkin, melongene, ochro, dasheen bush, and onions
• ↓Fruit eg; banana, cirrus, mangoes, pineapple, pawpaw
• ↓Livestock eg sheep, goat, dairy, duck
• ↓Pulses eg; pigeon peas, bodi, lentils.
Regarding forex earners, Bharath noted the plan identified strategic crops like cocoa, honey and hot peppers for the export market.
In addition, he highlighted that the Ministry produced a booklet ’Investment Opportunities in Agriculture’ to provide information for entrepreneurs to actively participate in the development of the sector.
Asked whether more money should be allocated to the sector, the former minister said the issue is not one of money but of focused effort on the sector and encouraging young entrepreneurs into agriculture.
On the issue of more technology use by farmers, Bharath said the government continues to pay lip service to the agricultural sector and the proposed widespread use of technology.
“Farming, like most entrepreneurial activities, has been transformed by the use of technology worldwide. If we are to achieve greater productivity and profitability, not only to meet local demands but to stave off imported competition, then we must adopt the best technological solutions available. The use of technology also encourages a younger generation to invest time and effort in the sector,” he emphasised.
Also, he identified that flooding needs to be addressed as it continues to be a permanent and perennial problem for the country as a whole but farmers in particular.
“The government has done virtually nothing in the last nine years to address this crisis. During my time as Minister of Food Production, Land and Marine Affairs, we built 300 retention ponds in agricultural areas across the country, with a plan to build a further 700 over a two-year period. There were also plans in place to build ‘community’ ponds,” he added.
Sharing his perspective on the upcoming budget, agriculture consultant Riyadh Mohammed, said this country’s agricultural sector contributed less than 2 per cent of Gross Domestic Product (GDP) over the last 5 years.
Mohammed said particular obstacles to the sector’s progress have been lower investment and stakeholder engagement.
“Unfortunately, the amount of food imported annually has been rising, with over $5 billion in 2019–2021 and $7.3 billion in 2022. One of the most important parts of the policy framework is to remove all taxes from the agriculture industry, especially if this sector is said to be in our diversification strategy.”
With all remaining uncertainties, omissions, and loopholes in the legislation leading to varying interpretations of what aspects of agriculture are tax-free and what are not addressed and remedied, he noted that this specified objective should be intended to be fulfilled through a legislative amendment by 2024.
“To make all of the sector’s concessions, incentives, and rebates—such as the fuel reimbursement for fishermen—more reasonable and pertinent, I would also like to see a review, update, and improvement done as needed and made clear to all stakeholders.”
On whether the sector should be used to bring in the much-needed foreign exchange, Mohammed said T&T needs to get its products and services across the borders and increase the need for them.
This, he said, is not as simple as it sounds, but achievable with the right support systems.
“Rapid changes are occurring in the global agricultural and food commerce sectors, which has significant effects on economic growth. Over the past three decades, there has been a significant expansion in global agricultural trade. This trade has undergone a significant structural shift, with a greater emphasis on high-value exports like dairy and meat products, as well as horticulture produce. The global market prices of numerous food and agricultural items skyrocketed during the pandemic in 2019, raising both price levels and the volatility of agricultural prices in the years that followed,” he detailed
Further, the consultant said the investment, particularly foreign direct investment, is growing quickly in middle-class and lower-class nations in the areas of food production, processing, and retail.
“Food standards are expanding quickly, and public and private regulations on food safety, quality, and ethical and environmental factors are controlling food production and commerce more and more. Global agricultural value chains are now structured differently as a result of the growth in agri-food markets around the world, with a greater emphasis on vertical coordination, supply base consolidation, and the dominance of big, multinational food corporations,” he said.
As it pertains to farmers embracing technology to make their work easier, Mohammed said they are embracing technology slowly, but surely.
He highlighted that the use of technology to improve the efficiency, sustainability, and productivity of agricultural processes is known as “agtech,” or agricultural technology. Agtech’s use has increased globally due to its ability to reduce expenses and increase yields.