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Thursday March 28, 2024

World Bank approves $300mln in loan to modernise agriculture

By our correspondents
December 17, 2017

KARACHI: The World Bank approved $300 million in loan to modernise agriculture sector in Pakistan, which is estimated to create over 300,000 new jobs.

The financial assistance will help the Punjab’s government to raise farmers’ incomes, give consumers better quality and safer food at lower prices, create jobs on farms and agribusinesses, and improve the use of irrigation water.

“The World Bank-supported strengthening markets for agriculture and rural transformation (Smart) project will support much-needed reforms for agriculture and livestock productivity, improve agriculture’s resilience to climate change, and foster agribusiness in Punjab over the next five years,” a statement said late on Friday. “It will also reduce inequality and expand opportunities for women and youth.”

The project will shift Rs55 billion (about $520 million) a year that is currently spent on inefficient and ineffective subsidies towards ‘Smart’ input subsidies for small farmers, agricultural research and farmers’ training, and support for high-value and climate-smart agriculture.

Additionally, Smart will help improve the sustainability of agricultural production by strengthening the management of irrigation water, and help tackle ground water depletion.

“Key reforms supported by the project include the transition towards high value agriculture, which will substantially raise farm incomes and employment in Punjab,” the statement quoted Hans Jansen, senior agriculture economist at the World Bank as saying. “This will be done by shifting resources away from ineffective subsidies towards supporting farmers to produce higher value products such as vegetables, fruits, pulses, oilseeds, milk and meat, whose demand is growing many times faster than lower value crops such as wheat.”

The Smart project is supported through the World Bank’s program-for-results (PforR) financing instrument.

PforR’s unique features include using a country’s own institutions and processes, and linking disbursement of funds directly to the achievement of tangible results.

The resources provided by the World Bank will be part of a larger program by the provincial government that aims to better harness the enormous potential for farming in the province, with its fertile soils and extensive irrigation system.

It addresses the paradox that while Punjab’s farmers earn too little, people pay high prices for low quality food. This situation is largely the result of farm policies that have hardly changed in the last 50 years. These include extensive subsidies that are inefficient and ineffective, and government spending that does not provide widespread benefits and results in wasteful water use.

\“Agriculture in Punjab has great potential but requires a paradigm shift to unlock growth opportunities,” Illango Patchamuthu, country director for Pakistan at World Bank said in the statement. “The government of Punjab is determined to help farmers grow high-value crops and significantly increase their incomes.”

The program is estimated to create 350,000 jobs and lift 1.7 million people from poverty.

“The Bank stands ready to support the government of Punjab in this exciting endeavour,” Patchamuthu added.