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How Prayut can be the farmer’s friend

Featured Replies

EDITORIAL

How Prayut can be the farmer’s friend

By The Nation

 

Changes at the Agriculture and Commerce ministries promise to improve the lot of rural people

 

The new Prayut Cabinet faces a daunting task in trying to improve the lot of farmers and other low-income citizens ahead of the general election touted to take place in about a year’s time. While the macro-economic picture has improved, with GDP growing 3.9 per cent in the third quarter of 2017 – the biggest increase in 18 months – the benefits have not been evenly distributed, mainly accruing to the export and related sectors.

 

The upcountry populace – and all those folks on the farm – remain in grim financial shape, due chiefly to the relatively meagre prices that agricultural produce is fetching. Those people end up with low purchasing power, among other negative consequences with which they have to cope.

 

In preparation for the upcoming polls, Prime Minister Prayut Chan-o-cha decided to reshuffle his Cabinet in a big way, bringing in more civilian ministers to shore up performance in Agriculture and key economic ministries. For three years, General Chatchai Sarikaya, a close confidante of Prayut, held the crucial Agriculture portfolio, often earning criticism for what was seen as a lacklustre showing. 

 

In the new line-up, the Agriculture Ministry will be in the hands of a former top bureaucrat of the Interior Ministry and a pair of deputy ministers who are experts in dealing with farmers and other segments of the rural population.

 

The Commerce Ministry sees another big shake-up, with two new ministers added to improve coordination with their counterparts at Agriculture. It is crucial that the Prayut regime win more hearts and minds among the rural electorate if he wishes to remain in politics and stand for election in a bid to hang on to the premier’s post, as is widely expected.

 

Prayut’s existing economic management team, led by Somkid Jatusripitak, has succeeded somewhat in stabilising and increasing economic growth – no easy feat given Western condemnation of the 2014 military coup. But that team still hasn’t adequately addressed the biggest challenge of all – financial inequality, an issue in which low-income voters such as farmers maintain a keen interest.

 

The government recently introduced welfare cards for the underprivileged, covering about 11 million people who earn less than Bt100,000 per year (or less than Bt8,400 per month). However, the benefits stemming from this welfare system for low-income people appear to be weaker upcountry than in Bangkok, as noted particularly in its subsidies for urban transportation.

 

The seemingly inevitable conclusion is that it would be more effective to help the rural poor through agricultural-price intervention and similar schemes. These could be better designed to provide sustainable income-generation capabilities for those getting the state help.

 

We have seen the previous Yingluck Shinawatra government severely penalised for implementing a rice price-pledging scheme that was widely popular but resulted in a massive loss of state funds and a dismaying spree of corruption. The Prayut government will have to come up with a plan as grand as that – while avoiding its pitfalls – if it wants more support from rural people, many of whose livelihoods are closely related to the prices of rice, rubber, tapioca, maize and the like.

 

We expect to see more innovative ideas from the new Agriculture and Commerce ministers, bringing solid results without repeating the mistakes of previous governments. Thailand needs programmes that better equip the recipient groups to help themselves in the long run.

 

Source: http://www.nationmultimedia.com/detail/opinion/30332923

 
thenation_logo.jpg
-- © Copyright The Nation 2017-12-01

Prayut will get the poor farmers to like him, even if it kills him . . . I do so hope that it does.

Edited by Ossy
omission

Congratulations Nation!

 

You have achieved the rare feat of writing an editorial using many words without actually saying anything.

 

 

1 hour ago, webfact said:

We expect to see more innovative ideas from the new Agriculture and Commerce ministers

Innovation is not one of the strengths of the military government. Their mentality is excessively regimented and disciplined for "outside" the square thinking. Hopefully the new non-military cabinet blood might have something to offer but farmers shouldn't hold their breath. 

It sometimes appears with much of the produce there is a very wide variation between what the farmers get and what consumers pay suggesting there is an excess of wealthy grasping predator middlemen creaming what otherwise should be going into the pockets of the farmers. There have even been suggestions the government protect many of these well connected so called  "agents".

Thai innovation seem to have it's limitations as exampled by TAT's weird and juvenile promo ideas and other stupidities such as "Miss Pinky". Hopefully the Agriculture Dept can innovate a bit better than that.

49 minutes ago, Samui Bodoh said:

Congratulations Nation!

 

You have achieved the rare feat of writing an editorial using many words without actually saying anything.

 

 

They can allow themselves to do so with no questions asked

as they're the owners of TVF...

A real friend would take all the farmers rice and then fail to pay them for it. 

3 hours ago, webfact said:

We expect to see more innovative ideas from the new Agriculture and Commerce ministers, bringing solid results

Do you?

 

That’s remarkably optimistic of you. 

Edited by Bluespunk

1 hour ago, Ossy said:

Prayut will get the poor farmers to like him, even if it kills him . . . I do so hope that it does.

 

sounds like a job for Miss Pinky Promise. :biggrin:

3 hours ago, webfact said:

How Prayut can be the farmer’s friend

Leave office

6 hours ago, webfact said:

The upcountry populace – and all those folks on the farm – remain in grim financial shape

Seems the downcountry fishermen and rubber farmers are not too happy either. His message to them has been basically "Shut Up."

Contrast the North and South with the annual 5% pay raises and increased benefits for Prayut's ever-expanding civil service empire in Bangkok.

6 hours ago, webfact said:

Prayut’s existing economic management team, led by Somkid Jatusripitak, has succeeded somewhat in stabilising and increasing economic growth – no easy feat given

...  the Democratic Party, PDRC and military interference destabilized and crashed economic growth. It is now after almost four years that the nation has recovered - no easy feat given the sustainability of Thais destroyed over that time.

6 hours ago, webfact said:

The seemingly inevitable conclusion is that it would be more effective to help the rural poor through agricultural-price intervention and similar schemes.

This has been actually Prayut's fundamental approach since 2014: subsidies, price supports through pledging schemes, grants, soft loans, debt forgiveness, etc. What is needed is a more fundamental change in the whole agricultural industry to reduce production costs while increasing BOTH supply and demand. Prayut has attempted solutions on a micro-level according to each commodity. What is needed is a macro-level approach for the entire industry.

 

Prayut can reshuffle Cabinets all he wants. The basic problem isn't whatever Cabinet he has chosen, but rather he has chosen to remain in power.

 

18 hours ago, webfact said:

For three years, General Chatchai Sarikaya, a close confidante of Prayut, held the crucial Agriculture portfolio, often earning criticism for what was seen as a lacklustre showing

Wonder what agricultural expertise this "General" brought to the table?

"The seemingly inevitable conclusion is that it would be more effective to help the rural poor through agricultural-price intervention and similar schemes"

 

Oh what fixing prices to help the farmers, why didn't anybody think of that before?

 

 

 

22 hours ago, yellowboat said:
Quote

How Prayut can be the farmer’s friend

 

Leave office

LOL, you beat me to it yellowboat... but I was thinking of something... er ummm... a bit more permanent... a bit more eternal, if you will.  Of course, that would also include Mr. Piggy.  Maybe someone should offer the pair free first-class airline tickets for a holiday to North Korea (one-way of course).  Just after departure someone would leak to Kim Jong-Un that Little P and Mr. Piggy are really secret agents working for Trump.  That should solve the problem. :partytime2:

On 12/1/2017 at 7:29 AM, Cadbury said:

Innovation is not one of the strengths of the military government. Their mentality is excessively regimented and disciplined for "outside" the square thinking

indeed; and recall, prior to the coup, a top military general said, paraphrasing: 'we cannot run the country, we are not trained for it'

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