Philippine agriculture needs productivity-led reforms

Banks say climate resilience must drive investment.

Philippine farm output climbed to ₱1.77 trillion in 2025, and rice self-sufficiency is seen at 84% by year-end. Those figures are encouraging, but they risk being treated as a finish line rather than a warning: production gains will not hold without fixing the weaknesses that keep the country reliant on imports and exposed to climate shocks.

Jun Palanca of ING Philippines framed the contradiction plainly. “Agriculture is central to the Philippine economy, employing around 1/5 of the workforce and providing the foundation for national food security, but the sector continues to face long standing structural challenges.” In other words, the sector matters, but it is still operating with constraints that make every weather event, logistics disruption, or price spike a national risk.

The policy debate often defaults to producing more. Palanca argued the real test is whether the Philippines can compete by upgrading how it produces. “In today's fast moving Asia Pacific landscape, competitiveness increasingly depends on producing smarter not just more,” he said. “That means modernising farming systems, adopting climate-smart technologies, improving logistics and generally integrating more deeply with regional value chains.” 

He also warned that “With right policy reforms and sustained investments, agriculture can evolve into a far more resilient, competitive and growth driving sector for the Philippines.”

Sarah Mak of ING APAC said the priority is not self-sufficiency rhetoric but measurable productivity that can survive climate stress. 

The to-do list is infrastructure-heavy and unglamorous, but unavoidable: “sustained investments in irrigation, mechanisation, agronomy support, modern post harvest as well as cold chain infrastructure alongside with climate smart practices that protect farmers from weather shocks.” She added that “digitalisation and AgTech can also help to derive supply chains and unlock important sustainable finance,” whilst “better logistics and harmonised trade standards will reduce waste and also open higher value markets.”

Execution will hinge on whether private capital shows up for the long haul. Palanca said, “Public policy sets the direction, but sustainable transformation really only happens when the private sector commits to the long term,” adding that “progress really depends on business financiers and supply chain partners working together.” 

Mak sharpened the mandate: “The private sector's most critical role is to connect capital capability and markets,” and “Global players, local champions and the entire value chain need to work together.”

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