Using
public-private partnerships to revamp agriculture
At the core
of any sustainable development and poverty reduction strategy for agriculture
is the ability to attract large dollar amounts of investment capital flows,
said experts at a recent forum in Hanoi.
The availability of private sector foreign direct
investment (FDI) in agriculture is constrained by many inherent risks and
other factors that make it – for all intents and purposes – not a viable
source of traditional FDI funding.
Smallholder
agriculture is under-funded
Smallholder
farmers operating in the segment primarily produce cash crops with as much as
40% of their short-term financing needs met by their value chain partners and
another 12% by commercial lenders.
Notably,
virtually all their long-term financing needs remain unmet.
The gap in
long-term financing is not a consequence of farmers not being able to operate
profitably as there is substantial research and support for the proposition
that with the extra financial funds, the country’s farmers would be able to
generate positive earnings.
Rather, the
gap is linked to the inherent high risks that transnational companies,
private banks and other financial institutions perceive in agricultural
lending— that they will lose their initial investment or not earn a reasonable
rate of return on the investment.
Using public
finance to addressing the financing gap
In line with
current experience, private sector finance is and most likely will remain
insufficient to meet the growing demand for finance from the country’s
farmers. This means that if one wants to tackle the problem of underfunding
for the agriculture segment, one needs to change the status quo.
While this
will require action on several fronts, one major opportunity to drastically
speed up the growth of agricultural finance lies with more efficient use of
public finance and transforming it into an effective means of leveraging
private sector funding.
The idea
that public funding, rather than being used to finance an entire project can
more efficiently be used to unlock private sector finance – thus achieving
leverage – is certainly not new.
In
infrastructure, the concept of public–private partnerships (PPPs) has been
developed actively from the 1990s onward and it makes particularly good sense
with respect to providing investment for agriculture.
Simply put,
traditional private sector FDI funding was always intended to be a vehicle to
attract investment by transnational companies in the manufacturing segment.
It was never intended to be nor has it become a source of investment for
agriculture.
To talk
about raising FDI from the private sector for agriculture in the traditional
sense absent a PPP— is pure folly, noted speakers at the conference.
PPPs can
effectively be used to attract FDI because they allow for shifting of risk to
the public sector while at the same time providing for a guaranteed
reasonable rate of return for the private sector investor.
At the
conference, Minister Nguyen Xuan Cuong of the Ministry of Agriculture and
Rural Development said that unless agriculture can effectively harness the
use of the PPP any opportunity for the segment to raise FDI of an amount
required to effectuate its revamp to raise its global competitiveness will be
lost.
Minister
Cuong noted the benefits of PPPs include cost efficiencies, improved yields,
better quality, reduced post-harvest losses and enhanced infrastructural
development, among others.
He added
that Vietnam agriculture largely consists of smallholders as more than 90% of
the farmers are small-scale operators and only about 2-3% of them sustainably
operate large scale mechanized farming.
To transform
the 90% of smallholders into large scale modernized farms utilizing high
level production technology requires substantial investment that can only be
raised through the PPP model.
To this end,
he underscored the Government is in the process of perfecting the PPP
arrangement with the end goal of significantly revamping the agriculture
segment and delivering its sustainability.
VOV
|
Thứ Sáu, 16 tháng 12, 2016
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