Categories: Opinion

Time to revive Malaysia’s past agricultural glory

by MUHAMMAD SAIFUL MUHAMMAD SAHAR / pic MUHD AMIN NAHARUL

MALAYSIA — or rather, back when we were known as Malaya — was the world’s largest natural rubber producer, including through the large-scale plantations established under British rule.

However, the country’s rubber plantation hectarage has consistently declined over the years as land has been converted to oil palm plantations and durian farms. This is because the latter crops are deemed to be more profitable as well as less prone to disease and are less labour intensive.

The same fate has also befallen sugar cane and paddy. Indeed, Malaysia’s Tan Sri Robert Kuok, dubbed the “Sugar King”, once controlled 10% of the global sugar trade.

Unfortunately, Malaysia has lost its pole position in sugar production to Brazil, India and Thailand. In fact, we are now entirely dependent on imported sugar following the closure of Chuping’s sugar cane plantation in 2012.

Interestingly, Economic Minister Rafizi Ramli last month said the country’s sugar cane industry will be developed to meet the nation’s demand for sugar. This statement is fortuitous because quite frankly, the need to revive the country’s ailing sugar industry to meet the ongoing domestic market demand for sugar — with the recent issue that sugar supply is not sufficient in certain states in Malaysia.

But how can we talk about developing the sugar cane industry when our own sugar refineries are suffering? Local refineries are in danger of shuttering due to the fact that the price of sugar is controlled at RM2.85 per kg — a price which has remained unchanged since 2013 despite rising input costs.

Furthermore, at RM2.85 per kg – the lowest in the region – the illegal smuggling of sugar across Malaysian land borders is commonplace. This has resulted in the reduction of our own citizens’ supply.

It should also be noted that Malaysia imported US$674 million (RM3.01 billion) raw sugar in 2021, ie 11th-largest importer of raw sugar in the world, primarily from Brazil (US$433 million), India (US$135 million), Thailand (US$66.9 million), South Africa (US$13.6 million) and Australia (US$8.46 million).

A Straits Times article dated May 16, 2023, warned that global sugar price is expected to soar further due to a decline in production in India and export restrictions imposed by the Indian government. Our country’s sugar supply will be impacted by the Indian sugar supply.

It is imperative that we address this supply issue as sugar is linked to food security and a much-needed component in food manufacturing. Furthermore, it is unrealistic to expect that Malaysian prices remain the same as they were a decade ago when there has been a steady increase in world sugar prices, driven by the global demand for sugar.

Separately, Malaysia did not face any rice supply disruptions during the Covid-19 lockdowns because we had a national rice stockpile. At the same time, we only grow about 70% of the rice we need and there’s always concern there will not be enough labour to keep even this rate up, especially with the younger generation seemingly not keen or not able to work in the agricultural industry.

The current Madani government must be able to strike the right balance between agriculture and industry as twin engines of Malaysia’s economic development. Both are crucial.

During the 1980s and 1990s, the trend was to abandon farming for manufacturing. But it is short-sighted to see the two as in competition with each other. Indeed, there are many synergies between the two.

The advent of technology with the use of the Internet of Things (IoT) and Industrial Revolution 4.0 (IR4.0) could transform our country’s agricultural sector by bringing smart and sustainable farming within the grasp of even smallholders or independent farmers.

This would enable such farmers to manage agriculture and livestock with more control and accuracy, while ensuring farm resilience. Also, used correctly, technology will likewise help reduce the labour intensity of agriculture across the board and hence, our need to bring in foreign labour or the continued angst over trying to persuade Malaysians to work on plantations.

Also, revving up agriculture will contribute to Malaysia’s quest for biofuels. If we could just achieve it — it would make the energy we consume, including for manufacturing, “greener” and less harmful to the environment in the long-run.

A stronger, smarter approach to agriculture will also help Malaysia punch above its weight in the food and beverage (F&B) industry such as through sugar manufacturing, animal husbandry, halal meat products, fruit and vegetables processing, oil and fat manufacturing, as well as seafood processing.

State governments will also be able to generate income and jobs via the development of unutilised land for agriculture development.

Therefore, Malaysia must continue to develop its agricultural sector. An immediate priority should be food crops to reduce our reliance on imports.

We must also be willing to break with orthodoxies of the past. Existing policies, including price ceilings for certain foodstuffs, need to be examined — just as the government is pledging to look at all monopolies — and if found to be standing in the way of what the rakyat need, discarded.

They were perhaps appropriate for when they were introduced, but the reality facing Malaysia now — of fierce competition for resources — is very different.

Malaysia needs political will and smart policies to revive its former agricultural glories. It can be done if our leaders and people put their minds to it.

  • Muhammad Saiful Muhammad Sahar, Nibong Tebal
Dzul

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