Rice farmers head for
pastures new
Le Van Phuoc, 53,
plans to sell the land where his family has grown rice for generations
because the grain is no longer profitable.
"When our
children grew up, they rushed to the big city to work in industrial zones,
where they earn double or triple what we make growing rice," says the
farmer, who lives in the Cuu Long (Mekong) Delta province of Tien Giang's Tan
Binh Commune in Cho Gao District. "Costs such as seedlings and fertiliser
are much higher than in the past and rice prices often fluctuate."
Phuoc estimates
that he can sell the 1,500 sq.m. plot of land for about VND600 million.
Dr Le Tien Banh,
rector of the Mekong River Delta's Rice Institute, says young people were
increasingly giving up farming to work in urban areas because agriculture was
so unprofitable. But this mass migration leaves thousands of hectares of land
fallow – posing a threat to national food security. Before 2011, this
occurred in several
Like other young
farmers, Nguyen Thi Lai, 21, gave up farming in the southern
"My parents
and three siblings and I worked very hard in our 3,000sq.m field but we still
faced at least a month of hunger," she said.
When her brothers
found work in the city two years ago, sending home VND2-2.5 million a month,
everything changed. Her youngest sister got the chance to go to school; her
parents plan to sell their land and move in with one of her brothers in
"Despite
working very hard, our farmers still live a life of poverty because the price
of fruit is so unstable," said Vo Thanh Duoc, chairman of the southern
Farmers in the Hong
(Red) River Delta are in a similar situation. "Despite working very hard
and achieving many bumper crops, we earn little profit - only
VND200,000-300,000 per sao (360sq.m). When our harvest fails, we suffer
losses," says Bui Thi Dung, a farmer in the
While her family
owns 10 sao (3,600sq.m) of rice field, they can only afford to farm six sao
because the price of seedlings, fertiliser and insecticide is very high. Each
sao yields 150-200kg of rice, which sell for about VND1.6 million. Dung's three
children traded farming for jobs in construction and dealing scrap iron in Ha
Noi, as have many of her neighbours - leaving the village with a population
of "elderly and young children".
The problem is not
just about rice. The real question is how the Government can ensure national
food security during the industrialisation and modernisation process,
particularly given the added challenge that Viet Nam is one of the five
nations most affected by climate change, said Nguyen Dinh Bich, a rice
expert.
Nguyen Do Anh Tuan,
director of the Ministry of Agriculture and Rural Development's Centre for
Agriculture Policy Consultant, said potential solutions include making it
easier for farmers to acquire land through credit policies and implementing
technology to help farmers increase their rice productivity and deal with
natural disaster and epidemics.
Ultimately, farmers
should replace rice with higher-value crops such as maize, potatoes and
vegetables, says Tuan. Livestock feed could also be a source of profit for
struggling farmers: each year Viet Nam imports 1.5-1.6 million tonnes of
maize, 2.4 tonnes of soybean oil, and 600,000 tonnes of soybeans to feed
livestock.
"We spend
millions of US dollars every year to import soybeans and maize for livestock,
so why should we not grow these crops domestically?" he says.
Le Quoc Doanh, head
of the Cultivation Department, says southern provinces have favourable
conditions to grow maize and soybeans.
"If science
and technology are applied well to growing these crops,
Nguyen Thi Nga,
deputy director of the Thai Binh provincial Department of Agriculture and
Rural Development, said the agriculture sector was currently "building a
suitable model" in which farmers could use their rice land to breed
livestock or grow other crops.
Growing cash crops
can be significantly more profitable than rice. During this year's
summer-autumn crop,
And while rice
farmers are leaving their fields, those growing coffee, rubber and pepper are
still satisfied.
Rice farmers earn
VND2-2.5 million/ha; a coffee farmer can earn VND100 million/ha, says former
deputy prime minister Nguyen Cong Tan, who was first to suggest that
Tan, who was in
charge of the country's agriculture sector for years, helped turn the poor
country into one of the world's top rice exporters, a status it has occupied
for almost 25 years. His proposition shows that
"Our current
agriculture policy needs to be amended," he says. "We should
implement trial renewal policies for agriculture in a certain area, say a
province or a region, for 10 years."
If
"Rice farmers
should be proud of producing this valuable crop and they should be able to
become rich from farming," he says. - VNS
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Chủ Nhật, 22 tháng 9, 2013
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