Sunday, 28 June 2026
Nasdaq -0.24%
Subscribe NowSupport Us
Partner feature
Daily Tribune partner feature
Partner feature

Daily TribuneDaily Tribune

Daily TribuneDaily Tribune
Subscribe
Sunday, 28 June 2026
Nasdaq -0.24%
  • News
  • Business
  • Commentary
  • Life
  • Show
  • Tech Talks
  • Sports
  • Dyaryo Tirada
Partner feature
Subscribe to Daily Tribune
Daily Tribune

The Philippines' leading digital newspaper.

News
  • Headlines
  • Metro
  • Nation
  • World
Business
  • Shipping
  • Portraits
  • Pep
  • Business Advisories
Commentary
  • Opinion
  • Editorial
  • Scuttlebutt
Life
  • Show
  • Food & Drink
  • Getaways
  • Arts & Culture
  • Social Set
  • Spaces
  • Fashion & Beauty
  • The Edit
  • Top Form
  • Next Gen
  • Sacred Space
  • Project Larawan
Sports
  • Hoops
  • Volley
  • Golf
  • Goal
  • Boxing
  • Tennis
  • Esports
  • Blast

More

  • Tech Talks
  • Dyaryo Tirada
  • Horoscope
  • Sudoku
  • Crossword
  • Photos
  • Embassy
  • Hotspot
  • Special Report
  • Innovation
  • Partnership
  • Remember Me
  • Environment
  • Natural Wonders
  • Earth

Company

  • About
  • Contact
  • Advertise
  • Privacy
  • Subscribe
  • Support Us

© 2026 Daily Tribune · tribune.net.ph · Powered by Quintype

BUSINESS

DA vows fixing Phl agri’s ‘broken economics’

Tiu Laurel stressed that the problem is not a lack of government effort, but how resources are deployed.

TM

Toby Magsaysay·19 January 2026, 2:24 am

Share

Google Preferred Sources

Get more Daily Tribune stories in your search results

Add Daily Tribune as a preferred source on Google Search.

Add to Google
DA vows fixing Phl agri’s ‘broken economics’

AGRICULTURE Secretary Francis Tiu Laurel Jr. (left) recently visited the ongoing construction of a P500-million cold storage facility in Pili, Camarines Sur, aimed at boosting the yields of farmers as the province is being developed as a premier logistics hub in the Bicol Region.

Photograph courtesy of DA

Partner feature
Driver's Den on YouTube

The Department of Agriculture (DA) has assured that it will fix what it describes as the “broken economics” in the country’s agriculture industry.

Speaking at the “Big Bold Reforms” forum on Friday, Agriculture Secretary Francisco P. Tiu Laurel Jr. said high rural poverty, uneven productivity, and recurring food supply shocks remain persistent challenges the sector must confront.

“Despite sustained public spending, outcomes on the ground remain fixed,” he said.

“Productivity gains have been uneven, farmer incomes remain low, and food supply shocks continue to affect consumers.”

Tiu Laurel stressed that the problem is not a lack of government effort, but how resources are deployed.

“These challenge points [are] not a lack of effort, but the need for better targeting, stronger governance, and more coordinated execution,” he said, adding that the DA is shifting “from fragmented and input-focused interventions to a coherent, impact-oriented, and result-driven reform agenda.”

The agriculture chief outlined several reforms aimed at addressing these bottlenecks, including a sharper targeting of public investments toward areas with high poverty incidence, strong production potential and low productivity.

“Basically, where the returns to interventions are the highest — it seems business,” Tiu Laurel said, signaling a more commercial mindset in farm spending.

Tweaking the approach

The second reform addresses the government’s traditionally rice-centric approach.

While rice remains vital, Tiu Laurel said the DA will pursue a more balanced commodity strategy by expanding support for fisheries, sugar, coconut, corn, livestock, and high-value crops to diversify income sources and reduce vulnerability to supply shocks.

Tiu Laurel emphasized that such reforms will not succeed without stronger governance, noting that his department has begun institutionalizing transparency, accountability, and participatory governance throughout the entire project cycle.

“Effective policies [are] not only about what we implement, but how transparently and accountable we do so,” he said, citing open access to program information and structured feedback mechanisms for farmers and fisherfolk.

The “Big Bold Reforms” forum brought together key figures from both the public and private sectors to strengthen domestic collaboration and help restore investor confidence following the economic slowdown in 2025.

Cabinet officials, including Tiu Laurel, along with heads of government agencies, provided business leaders with concrete updates on the economy, reform priorities, and strategic initiatives aimed at supporting inclusive and resilient growth in the year ahead.

Share

Google Preferred Sources

Get more Daily Tribune stories in your search results

Add Daily Tribune as a preferred source on Google Search.

Add to Google
Partner feature
Driver's Den on YouTube

Suggested Articles

Higher imports widen Q1’s external gap
BUSINESS

Higher imports widen Q1’s external gap

The Philippines' balance of payments (BoP) deficit widened to $5.3 billion in the first quarter of 2026, equivalent to…

Toby Magsaysay·28 June 2026

Constructive dismissal despite resignation
OPINION

Constructive dismissal despite resignation

The employer must show by clear, positive, and convincing evidence that the resignation was indeed voluntary.

Eduardo Martinez·28 June 2026

BSP targets lower online fees
BUSINESS

BSP targets lower online fees

To strengthen oversight, BSP-supervised financial institutions will be required to maintain cost analyses for their…

Toby Magsaysay·28 June 2026

Steel industry sees rebound as infra spending resumes
BUSINESS

Steel industry sees rebound as infra spending resumes

‘Our encouragement is to fund and start these anomaly-free constructions so the country can move forward.’

Raffy Ayeng·28 June 2026

Tuna today, gone tomorrow
BUSINESS

Tuna today, gone tomorrow

A small fish in a big can just swam out the door, and Nosy Tarsee is unimpressed by the chum thrown out to explain it.

DT·28 June 2026

Championing a smarter approach to recovery
PARTNERSHIP

Championing a smarter approach to recovery

‘When you exercise, you create microtears in the muscles,’ he explains. ‘The rebuilding process occurs during recovery.’

Dani Mari Arnaiz·28 June 2026