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PART I
“AGRARIAN
REFORM…”
CONCEPTS
ASPECTS OF AGRARIAN REFORM
IMPLEMENTATION OF AGRARIAN
REFORM
COMPARATIVE AGRARIAN REFORM
PROGRAMS
AGRARIAN REFORM AND BALANCED
DEVELOPMENT
A. CONCEPT
Meaning of Land Reform
   Reform implies the existence of a defect
that something is deformed of malformed and
does not suit existing conditions.

    In broad sense, land reform refers to the
full range of measures that may or should be
taken to improve or remedy the defects in the
relations among men with respect to their
rights in land.
The term has also been defined as an
integrated set of measures designed to
eliminate obstacles to economic and social
development arising out of defects in the
agrarian structure.
Land reform thus involves the “transformation
of agrarian structure” or what are sometimes
called “structural reforms.”
“Land reform” is often used interchangeably
with “agrarian reform” but in actuality, the
latter is much broader than the reformer.
Meaning of Agrarian Structure

 In the above context, agrarian structure is
 defined as a complex set of relationship
 within the agricultural sector among tenure
 structure, production structure and the
 structure of supporting services. A
 comprehensive land reform program can
 never be complete without integrated
 reforms of all three structures.
Meaning of Land Tenure
        Structure

Land tenure structure is a concept which
refers to one or more types of land tenure
systems regulating the rights to ownership
and control and usage of land and the duties
accompanying such tights.
Agricultural tenancy, as a manner of holding
agricultural lands, is only one of several
forms of land tenure or rights in land. It
involves the question of whether share
tenancy or leasehold tenancy is adopted.
Under share tenancy, tillers work on the
land as sharecroppers entitled to share in
the produce of the land.
One of the main defects of our country
agrarian structure was the high proportion
of share tenancy in our country. In this
regard, our Code of Agrarian Reforms
automatically converts tenants to lessees.
(Sec. 4, infra.) The next stage is the
conversion of the lessee to amortizing
owner; and finally to own-cultivator. (Sec.
2[1], infra.) Pursuant to Presidential Decree
No.27,     tenant-farmers     are     deemed
amortizing owners of rice and/or corn lands
they till.
Example of Land Tenure Reform
           Measures
  Land tenure reform measures would include the
  following:
  1. Redistribution of private lands
  2. Distribution    of    lands    in     the public
     domain, sometimes also referred to as
     resettlement or colonization
  3. Regulation of tenancy
  4. Regulation of agricultural labor contracts and
     wages; and
  5. Elimination of absentee landlordism and transfer
     of land ownership to the actual tillers.
Meaning of Production
      Structure
Production structure is a concept which
relates to the nature, type and modus
operandi as well as the actual process of
production or farm operation.

It is also directly related to the
size, location and shape of the production
unit holding, which may be operated singly
or with assistance from others.
Examples of Production
      Structures Distinguished
  The following would fall under production reform
  measures:
1. Consolidation of small, uneconomic holdings to
   insure optimum utilization
2. Imposition of a floor on holdings of uneconomic
   size beyond which subdivision is to be prevented
3. Promotion of cooperative or compact farming
   among sub marginal farmers
4. imposition of a ceiling on holdings of non-
   cultivating owners
5. Organization of crop rotation system
Land Tenure and Production
  Structures Distinguished

The land tenure structure must be
distinguished from the production
structure as it is necessary to make a
distinction between the concept of “rights
in land” and the concept of production and
use of land”. Essentially, this implies a
clear distinction between the ownership
holding and the operation holding.
The first concept referring to the rights over
land, whether in terms of full ownership or as
circumscribed by law, irrespective of the
manner in which the holding is operated or
managed.



The second is a concept referring to the actual
management of holding or the manager in which
the land is cultivated or operated irrespective of
ownership.
Meaning of Structure of
     Supporting Services

The structure of supporting services is a
concept which involves matters like
credit, marketing, the supplying of
agricultural
requisites, processing, storage, etc. and other
technical assistance bearing on reforms of
tenure and production structures.
These services are provided mainly by the
Department of Agrarian Reform, the Land
Bank and the Bureau of Agricultural
Extension and they are designed to insure
the success of the farmer who has acquired a
new tenure status as lessee, amortizing
owner-cultivator. They prepare the lessee
for landownership and assist the owner-
cultivator to use the land more productively
and thus increase his income.
Meaning of Agrarian Reform
 Agrarian reform is considered wider than
 land reform.

1. The term comprises not only land
reform, the reform of tenure, production and
supporting services.
2. In the Comprehensive Agrarian Reform Law of
  1988 (R.A No. 6657), agrarian reform is defined to
  mean “the redistribution of lands, regardless of
  crops or fruits produced, to farmers and regular
  farm workers who are landless, irrespective of
  tenurial arrangement, to include the totality of
  factors and support services designed to lift the
  economics status of the beneficiaries and all other
  arrangements alternative to the physical
  redistribution of lands, such as production or
  profit-sharing, land administration and the
  distribution of shares of stock, which will allow
  beneficiaries to receive a just share of the fruits of
  the lands they work.”
Examples of Agrarian Reform
           Measures
  Agrarian reform would, therefore, also cover
  the following:
1. Public health programs
2. Family planning
3. Education and training of farmers
4. Reorganization of land reforms agencies
5. Application of labor laws to agricultural
   workers
6. Construction of infrastructure facilities such
  as feeder roads, irrigation systems, etc., and
  the establishment of rural electrification
7. Organization of various types of voluntary
  associations
8. Providing employment opportunities to
  underemployed or surplus rural labor; and
9. Other services of a community development
  nature
B. ASPECTS OF
  AGRARIAN
   REFORM
Economic Aspect of Agrarian
          Reform
1. Vital position of agricultural in national
   economy.
2. Obstacles to agricultural productivity.
3. Agrarian reform, an instrument for
   increasing agricultural productivity.
Socio-cultural Aspect of
           Agrarian Reform
1. Agrarian reform, a multifaceted program.
2. Assumptions about Filipino tenant farmers.
   To mention only the relevant ones, these are, namely:
   a. The tenancy problem has its roots in pre-Spanish
   and Spanish pasts. It is, therefore, a centuries old
   problem;
   b. deeply rooted in history, the tenancy system
   created a kind of tenants who are strongly traditional
   and highly dependent-minded; and
c. There are only three kinds of landlords; the
  benevolent one who acts like a father to the
  tenant; the malevolent one who oppresses, and
  one with the combined characteristics of the
  first two.
3. Socio-cultural changes from agrarian reform.
      According to the general experience in
  countries which have achieved successes in
  their agrarian reform programs, agrarian
  reform had resulted to favorable socio-cultural
  changes which may be summarized as follows;
a. A change from self-subsistent outlook to one of
   surplus. The farmers began putting all their energies
   in the farm;
b. A sound social order in the farming villages was
   enhanced significantly. The farmers became more
   conscious of the need to maintain peace and stability
   in the community so that they could continuously
   enjoy the increased benefits in the farm;
c. Farmers’ initiative and active participation in
   leadership roles were promoted. Before, such roles
   were the monopoly of the landowning class. After
   land reform, farmers began forming associations
   stood in equal footing with their erstwhile landlords
   in social gatherings and club meetings. They, too
   began to take active participation in local and
   national elections; and
d.     As land reform enhanced agricultural
     productivity and consequently, increase net
     family incomes, the farmer were able to send
     their to school. They widened their contracts
     with the outside world through frequent trips
     to market and other places or through
     communication facilities which they acquired.
Religious Aspect of Agrarian
           Reform
1. Biblical background.
2. Papal teachings
3. Church estates
Moral Aspect of Agrarian
             Reform
  Agrarian reform is demanded by the moral laws under
  so many titles.
1. One reason concerns the peace and internal stability
   of a country.
2. Another reason for agrarian reform is the fact that the
   land-owner has been more than compensated for
   his investment on land, while the tenant who made the
   landlord’s profits possible is still immersed in poverty
3. There is also the question of injustice involved in
   landlordism.
4. Another consideration concerns the innate tendency
   of everyman to own land.
5. A final consideration concerns the economy.
Legal Aspect of Agrarian
            Reform
1. Two vantage points. ---- strictly legal and
   sociological.
2. Agrarian reform legislations to conform
   with Constitution.
3. Constitutional mandates.
4. Policy development concerning agrarian
   reform.
Political Aspect of Agrarian
               Reform
1. Agrarian reform, a top-priority goal of
   government.

2. Agrarian reform as a political process.
C.IMPLEMENTATIO
  N OF AGRARIAN
     REFORM
Ways of Effecting changes in
      Agrarian Reform
  Changes in the agrarian structure can be achieved in
  practice by revolutionary means, by an authoritarian regime
  or by evolutionary means through the democratic process.

1. In a revolutionary situation, it is accomplished as a result
   of a shift of political, economic and administrative power
   to a class which would benefit directly by the forms.
2. It can also be introduced by an authoritarian regime
   already in power as a means of broadening its political
   base and of accomplishing certain desired economic and
   social changes.
3. The implementation of land reform within a politically
   democratic framework, however, presents problems.
Requirements For Successful
Implementation Of Agrarian
         Reform
Many countries in Asia and in the Far East
have legislated for programs of agrarian
reform during the last four decades. There
has been however, a wide gap between the
declared objectives of such legislation and
the actual realization. This has been
attributed to the failure to appreciate the
peculiar nature and the needs of land reform
implementation.
1. Agrarian reform is a complex and often
   controversial program which usually meets
   with opposition form vested interests. It
   is, therefore, necessary that any
   organization for its implementation
   should provide for a line of command from
   the center to filed levels in order to insure
   that policy is enforced and supported at all
   levels.
2. In view of the fact that all support is usually
   withdrawn by landlord on the introduction
   of the program, it is essential that
   beneficiaries are provided with the
3. Since the preventing political, economic, social
  and administrative systems are usually weighed
  against the would-be beneficiaries, it is necessary
  that the administrative organization and
  procedures as well as the judicial system by
  which the newly conferred rights are to be
  enforced, are refashioned in such a manner as to
  enable the attainment of the objective of the
  program; and

4. Lastly, since existing administrators are often not
  adequately oriented or sympathetic towards the
  reforms and such a program is often obstructed by
  vested interests at all levels, it is desirable to
  involve the beneficiaries in the implementation
  of the programs.
D. COMPARATIVE
    AGRARIAN
     REFORM
   PROGRAMS
Agrarian Reform Program
              Classified
     The history of agrarian reform is a long one and consequently
     there have evolved several program models. Any agrarian reform
     program will fall under either of the following:

1.    Rearrangement of tenancy relations.
2.    Redistribution of land to the peasants by:
    a. distribution of land in the public domain, sometimes
 also preferred to as settlement or colonization
    b. the distribution of private lands and landed estates
 and parceling them to the tenants, accompanied by a
 message program of technical and financial assistance by
 the government.
    c. consolidation
    d. confiscation of private lands
Agrarian Reform Program in
      Various Countries
  The various agrarian reform programs in many
  countries, while basically the same in their
  objectives, vary in their specific. Where redistribution
  of land is the principal prop of a State’s agrarian reform
  program, the following points become cogent:
1. Retention ceiling
2. Recipients or beneficiaries of the redistribution
   program
3. Valuation
4. Mode of payment
5. Repayment of new owners
6. Government support– Two methods as far as
  direction of repayment is concerned, have been
  adopted:
     a. the farmer directly pays for his land to the
  original landowner under a system of
  amortization with the least interference form
  the government; and
     b. in the majority of democratic and
  developing countries, the new owners pay the
  government who earlier has acquired or
  expropriated these properties from private
  owners.
7. Obligations of the new owners
       These     conditions,    which    are  almost
   universal, are the following:
       a. fragmentation of allocated land is almost
   always prohibited to prevent further subdivision
   of the land as to make it uneconomic
       b. one cannot be a recipient of land unless he
   becomes a member of the cooperative
       c. land is not transferable except in cases of
   inheritance; and
       d. recipients of expropriated lands must
   personally cultivate their lands and at best, they
   can only hire agricultural labor. Subletting is
   generally prohibited.
E. AGRARIAN
 REFORM AND
  BALANCED
DEVELOPMENT
Agrarian Reform And
         Industrialization
1. The first, a vehicle for the second.
2. Relationship between agriculture and industry.
   Industrialization needs from agrarian
reform and a developed agriculture, the
following:
a. surplus agricultural crops as raw materials;
b. mass purchasing power of the peasant
masses;
c. capital and skill released from underutilized
land by agrarian reform; and
On the other hand, agrarian reform and agricultural
  development need from a well-developed
  industry, the following:
   a. market for surplus production
   b. agricultural machinery, chemicals and
research
   c. employment for excess manpower; and
   d. capital generated by industry.
3. Important condition for industrialization. – To
  industrialize, the following condition are
  imperative:
     a. we have a labor force that is more or less
  adequately fed on very cheap staples.
     b. we must develop an agricultural sector
  that is increasingly well-off in terms of surplus
  income. Not all our products can be exported;
  and
     c. there must be consumption within the
  country. This internal or domestic demand
  cannot be created unless the farming sector is
  able to afford the products of industry.
Agrarian Reform And
        Urbanization
1. Requirement for urbanization.
2. Development inputs from agricultural
   sector.
3. Interdependence between the cities and
   farms.
Agrarian Reform And
   Community Development
1. Meaning of community development.
2. Two basic elements.
a. the active participation by the people themselves in efforts
     to improve their level of living with as much reliance as
     possible on their own initiative and resources; and
b. The provision of technical and material assistance by the
     government wherever and whenever such assistance is
     necessary and in ways which will encourage, self-help
     and mutual help.
3. An approach to agrarian reform
4. Supporting institutions to agrarian reform
To ensure the continuity of the enthusiasm and
 spontaneous acrion generated in local agrarian
 reformefforts, it is necessary:
a. To broaden the base of these institutions to include all
   interests in the local community;
b. To provide new institutions initially with adequate
   external financial, technical and political support; and
c. To continuously        expose these institutions to new
   knowledge and scientific advances relevant to their
   needs.
Agrarian Reform And
        Cooperatives
1. Cooperatives support Agrarian Reform
   Program.
2. Cooperatives benefit farmer.
3. Policy of the state with respect to
   cooperatives.

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Agrarian Reform

  • 2. CONCEPTS ASPECTS OF AGRARIAN REFORM IMPLEMENTATION OF AGRARIAN REFORM COMPARATIVE AGRARIAN REFORM PROGRAMS AGRARIAN REFORM AND BALANCED DEVELOPMENT
  • 4. Meaning of Land Reform Reform implies the existence of a defect that something is deformed of malformed and does not suit existing conditions. In broad sense, land reform refers to the full range of measures that may or should be taken to improve or remedy the defects in the relations among men with respect to their rights in land.
  • 5. The term has also been defined as an integrated set of measures designed to eliminate obstacles to economic and social development arising out of defects in the agrarian structure. Land reform thus involves the “transformation of agrarian structure” or what are sometimes called “structural reforms.” “Land reform” is often used interchangeably with “agrarian reform” but in actuality, the latter is much broader than the reformer.
  • 6. Meaning of Agrarian Structure In the above context, agrarian structure is defined as a complex set of relationship within the agricultural sector among tenure structure, production structure and the structure of supporting services. A comprehensive land reform program can never be complete without integrated reforms of all three structures.
  • 7. Meaning of Land Tenure Structure Land tenure structure is a concept which refers to one or more types of land tenure systems regulating the rights to ownership and control and usage of land and the duties accompanying such tights.
  • 8. Agricultural tenancy, as a manner of holding agricultural lands, is only one of several forms of land tenure or rights in land. It involves the question of whether share tenancy or leasehold tenancy is adopted. Under share tenancy, tillers work on the land as sharecroppers entitled to share in the produce of the land.
  • 9. One of the main defects of our country agrarian structure was the high proportion of share tenancy in our country. In this regard, our Code of Agrarian Reforms automatically converts tenants to lessees. (Sec. 4, infra.) The next stage is the conversion of the lessee to amortizing owner; and finally to own-cultivator. (Sec. 2[1], infra.) Pursuant to Presidential Decree No.27, tenant-farmers are deemed amortizing owners of rice and/or corn lands they till.
  • 10. Example of Land Tenure Reform Measures Land tenure reform measures would include the following: 1. Redistribution of private lands 2. Distribution of lands in the public domain, sometimes also referred to as resettlement or colonization 3. Regulation of tenancy 4. Regulation of agricultural labor contracts and wages; and 5. Elimination of absentee landlordism and transfer of land ownership to the actual tillers.
  • 11. Meaning of Production Structure Production structure is a concept which relates to the nature, type and modus operandi as well as the actual process of production or farm operation. It is also directly related to the size, location and shape of the production unit holding, which may be operated singly or with assistance from others.
  • 12. Examples of Production Structures Distinguished The following would fall under production reform measures: 1. Consolidation of small, uneconomic holdings to insure optimum utilization 2. Imposition of a floor on holdings of uneconomic size beyond which subdivision is to be prevented 3. Promotion of cooperative or compact farming among sub marginal farmers 4. imposition of a ceiling on holdings of non- cultivating owners 5. Organization of crop rotation system
  • 13. Land Tenure and Production Structures Distinguished The land tenure structure must be distinguished from the production structure as it is necessary to make a distinction between the concept of “rights in land” and the concept of production and use of land”. Essentially, this implies a clear distinction between the ownership holding and the operation holding.
  • 14. The first concept referring to the rights over land, whether in terms of full ownership or as circumscribed by law, irrespective of the manner in which the holding is operated or managed. The second is a concept referring to the actual management of holding or the manager in which the land is cultivated or operated irrespective of ownership.
  • 15. Meaning of Structure of Supporting Services The structure of supporting services is a concept which involves matters like credit, marketing, the supplying of agricultural requisites, processing, storage, etc. and other technical assistance bearing on reforms of tenure and production structures.
  • 16. These services are provided mainly by the Department of Agrarian Reform, the Land Bank and the Bureau of Agricultural Extension and they are designed to insure the success of the farmer who has acquired a new tenure status as lessee, amortizing owner-cultivator. They prepare the lessee for landownership and assist the owner- cultivator to use the land more productively and thus increase his income.
  • 17. Meaning of Agrarian Reform Agrarian reform is considered wider than land reform. 1. The term comprises not only land reform, the reform of tenure, production and supporting services.
  • 18. 2. In the Comprehensive Agrarian Reform Law of 1988 (R.A No. 6657), agrarian reform is defined to mean “the redistribution of lands, regardless of crops or fruits produced, to farmers and regular farm workers who are landless, irrespective of tenurial arrangement, to include the totality of factors and support services designed to lift the economics status of the beneficiaries and all other arrangements alternative to the physical redistribution of lands, such as production or profit-sharing, land administration and the distribution of shares of stock, which will allow beneficiaries to receive a just share of the fruits of the lands they work.”
  • 19. Examples of Agrarian Reform Measures Agrarian reform would, therefore, also cover the following: 1. Public health programs 2. Family planning 3. Education and training of farmers 4. Reorganization of land reforms agencies 5. Application of labor laws to agricultural workers
  • 20. 6. Construction of infrastructure facilities such as feeder roads, irrigation systems, etc., and the establishment of rural electrification 7. Organization of various types of voluntary associations 8. Providing employment opportunities to underemployed or surplus rural labor; and 9. Other services of a community development nature
  • 21. B. ASPECTS OF AGRARIAN REFORM
  • 22. Economic Aspect of Agrarian Reform 1. Vital position of agricultural in national economy. 2. Obstacles to agricultural productivity. 3. Agrarian reform, an instrument for increasing agricultural productivity.
  • 23. Socio-cultural Aspect of Agrarian Reform 1. Agrarian reform, a multifaceted program. 2. Assumptions about Filipino tenant farmers. To mention only the relevant ones, these are, namely: a. The tenancy problem has its roots in pre-Spanish and Spanish pasts. It is, therefore, a centuries old problem; b. deeply rooted in history, the tenancy system created a kind of tenants who are strongly traditional and highly dependent-minded; and
  • 24. c. There are only three kinds of landlords; the benevolent one who acts like a father to the tenant; the malevolent one who oppresses, and one with the combined characteristics of the first two. 3. Socio-cultural changes from agrarian reform. According to the general experience in countries which have achieved successes in their agrarian reform programs, agrarian reform had resulted to favorable socio-cultural changes which may be summarized as follows;
  • 25. a. A change from self-subsistent outlook to one of surplus. The farmers began putting all their energies in the farm; b. A sound social order in the farming villages was enhanced significantly. The farmers became more conscious of the need to maintain peace and stability in the community so that they could continuously enjoy the increased benefits in the farm; c. Farmers’ initiative and active participation in leadership roles were promoted. Before, such roles were the monopoly of the landowning class. After land reform, farmers began forming associations stood in equal footing with their erstwhile landlords in social gatherings and club meetings. They, too began to take active participation in local and national elections; and
  • 26. d. As land reform enhanced agricultural productivity and consequently, increase net family incomes, the farmer were able to send their to school. They widened their contracts with the outside world through frequent trips to market and other places or through communication facilities which they acquired.
  • 27. Religious Aspect of Agrarian Reform 1. Biblical background. 2. Papal teachings 3. Church estates
  • 28. Moral Aspect of Agrarian Reform Agrarian reform is demanded by the moral laws under so many titles. 1. One reason concerns the peace and internal stability of a country. 2. Another reason for agrarian reform is the fact that the land-owner has been more than compensated for his investment on land, while the tenant who made the landlord’s profits possible is still immersed in poverty 3. There is also the question of injustice involved in landlordism. 4. Another consideration concerns the innate tendency of everyman to own land. 5. A final consideration concerns the economy.
  • 29. Legal Aspect of Agrarian Reform 1. Two vantage points. ---- strictly legal and sociological. 2. Agrarian reform legislations to conform with Constitution. 3. Constitutional mandates. 4. Policy development concerning agrarian reform.
  • 30. Political Aspect of Agrarian Reform 1. Agrarian reform, a top-priority goal of government. 2. Agrarian reform as a political process.
  • 31. C.IMPLEMENTATIO N OF AGRARIAN REFORM
  • 32. Ways of Effecting changes in Agrarian Reform Changes in the agrarian structure can be achieved in practice by revolutionary means, by an authoritarian regime or by evolutionary means through the democratic process. 1. In a revolutionary situation, it is accomplished as a result of a shift of political, economic and administrative power to a class which would benefit directly by the forms. 2. It can also be introduced by an authoritarian regime already in power as a means of broadening its political base and of accomplishing certain desired economic and social changes. 3. The implementation of land reform within a politically democratic framework, however, presents problems.
  • 33. Requirements For Successful Implementation Of Agrarian Reform Many countries in Asia and in the Far East have legislated for programs of agrarian reform during the last four decades. There has been however, a wide gap between the declared objectives of such legislation and the actual realization. This has been attributed to the failure to appreciate the peculiar nature and the needs of land reform implementation.
  • 34. 1. Agrarian reform is a complex and often controversial program which usually meets with opposition form vested interests. It is, therefore, necessary that any organization for its implementation should provide for a line of command from the center to filed levels in order to insure that policy is enforced and supported at all levels. 2. In view of the fact that all support is usually withdrawn by landlord on the introduction of the program, it is essential that beneficiaries are provided with the
  • 35. 3. Since the preventing political, economic, social and administrative systems are usually weighed against the would-be beneficiaries, it is necessary that the administrative organization and procedures as well as the judicial system by which the newly conferred rights are to be enforced, are refashioned in such a manner as to enable the attainment of the objective of the program; and 4. Lastly, since existing administrators are often not adequately oriented or sympathetic towards the reforms and such a program is often obstructed by vested interests at all levels, it is desirable to involve the beneficiaries in the implementation of the programs.
  • 36. D. COMPARATIVE AGRARIAN REFORM PROGRAMS
  • 37. Agrarian Reform Program Classified The history of agrarian reform is a long one and consequently there have evolved several program models. Any agrarian reform program will fall under either of the following: 1. Rearrangement of tenancy relations. 2. Redistribution of land to the peasants by: a. distribution of land in the public domain, sometimes also preferred to as settlement or colonization b. the distribution of private lands and landed estates and parceling them to the tenants, accompanied by a message program of technical and financial assistance by the government. c. consolidation d. confiscation of private lands
  • 38. Agrarian Reform Program in Various Countries The various agrarian reform programs in many countries, while basically the same in their objectives, vary in their specific. Where redistribution of land is the principal prop of a State’s agrarian reform program, the following points become cogent: 1. Retention ceiling 2. Recipients or beneficiaries of the redistribution program 3. Valuation 4. Mode of payment 5. Repayment of new owners
  • 39. 6. Government support– Two methods as far as direction of repayment is concerned, have been adopted: a. the farmer directly pays for his land to the original landowner under a system of amortization with the least interference form the government; and b. in the majority of democratic and developing countries, the new owners pay the government who earlier has acquired or expropriated these properties from private owners.
  • 40. 7. Obligations of the new owners These conditions, which are almost universal, are the following: a. fragmentation of allocated land is almost always prohibited to prevent further subdivision of the land as to make it uneconomic b. one cannot be a recipient of land unless he becomes a member of the cooperative c. land is not transferable except in cases of inheritance; and d. recipients of expropriated lands must personally cultivate their lands and at best, they can only hire agricultural labor. Subletting is generally prohibited.
  • 41. E. AGRARIAN REFORM AND BALANCED DEVELOPMENT
  • 42. Agrarian Reform And Industrialization 1. The first, a vehicle for the second. 2. Relationship between agriculture and industry. Industrialization needs from agrarian reform and a developed agriculture, the following: a. surplus agricultural crops as raw materials; b. mass purchasing power of the peasant masses; c. capital and skill released from underutilized land by agrarian reform; and
  • 43. On the other hand, agrarian reform and agricultural development need from a well-developed industry, the following: a. market for surplus production b. agricultural machinery, chemicals and research c. employment for excess manpower; and d. capital generated by industry.
  • 44. 3. Important condition for industrialization. – To industrialize, the following condition are imperative: a. we have a labor force that is more or less adequately fed on very cheap staples. b. we must develop an agricultural sector that is increasingly well-off in terms of surplus income. Not all our products can be exported; and c. there must be consumption within the country. This internal or domestic demand cannot be created unless the farming sector is able to afford the products of industry.
  • 45. Agrarian Reform And Urbanization 1. Requirement for urbanization. 2. Development inputs from agricultural sector. 3. Interdependence between the cities and farms.
  • 46. Agrarian Reform And Community Development 1. Meaning of community development. 2. Two basic elements. a. the active participation by the people themselves in efforts to improve their level of living with as much reliance as possible on their own initiative and resources; and b. The provision of technical and material assistance by the government wherever and whenever such assistance is necessary and in ways which will encourage, self-help and mutual help. 3. An approach to agrarian reform 4. Supporting institutions to agrarian reform
  • 47. To ensure the continuity of the enthusiasm and spontaneous acrion generated in local agrarian reformefforts, it is necessary: a. To broaden the base of these institutions to include all interests in the local community; b. To provide new institutions initially with adequate external financial, technical and political support; and c. To continuously expose these institutions to new knowledge and scientific advances relevant to their needs.
  • 48. Agrarian Reform And Cooperatives 1. Cooperatives support Agrarian Reform Program. 2. Cooperatives benefit farmer. 3. Policy of the state with respect to cooperatives.