Policy Changes Helping Reduce Rural Poverty in Myanmar

Policy Changes Helping Reduce Rural Poverty in Myanmar
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The changes underway in Myanmar can be felt almost everywhere: in Nay Pyi Taw portraits of Bogyoke Aung San grace the walls of parliament; in Yangon traffic is choking roads while construction cranes dominate the skyline; and across the country ports, airports, and border crossings are booming with trade. Felt almost everywhere that is except in rural areas, where the impacts of change are less visible.

And yet rural communities are home to the majority of Myanmar’s population, the majority of its many ethnic groups, and 70 per cent of its poor. Recognizing this disparity, policy makers in Myanmar have stressed rural poverty reduction to be a key priority for the coming years.

This is a task as ambitious as it is critical – enabling rural communities to participate in expanding economic opportunities will be central to inclusive growth in Myanmar and to the growth of a strong, diverse and united nation.

How to reduce rural poverty in Myanmar?

First and foremost it will take an increase in agricultural productivity to make farmers richer.

Second, improved access to essential services to create opportunities in rural communities will be critical.

Third, more focused and efficient public spending is important, so resources flow to people who need them and to programs that work. A mix of policies and investments, informed by listening to both people and evidence, can help achieve all three.

In  Zeegon Town Farmer U Phyo owns 3.6 hectares (nine acres) of land where he grows rice, but can barely make ends meet with his income.

“All farmers are struggling with the same challenges. We are faced with very low prices after harvesting, the rising cost of rice production, and hardly any access to bank loans that are suitable for farmers like us,” he said.

Yield For Rice Among The Lowest In Asia

A subsistence farmer outside his home on the banks of the Taungthaman Lake near Amarapura, Myanmar
A subsistence farmer outside his home on the banks of the Taungthaman Lake near Amarapura, Myanmar Photo: Courtesy flickr contributor amanderson2

More than half of Myanmar’s labor force works in agriculture, but the average yield of the dominant crop, paddy rice, is among the lowest in Asia. Add in post-harvest losses and high transport cost, and profits from farming fall even further.

Indeed, one hectare (2.5 acres) of monsoon season rice from the Myanmar Delta region – the country’s rice bowl and one of the most fertile growing regions in the world – on average generates just $140 in profit, compared to $340 in Cambodia and $430 in Vietnam.

Boosting productivity – and thus profitability – will require reforms to increase the availability and adoption of modern farm technologies, as well as investments in seeds and extension services.

For example, in 2013-2014 total spending by the Ministry of Agriculture and Irrigation (MAI) on seed and extension programs was only 0.22 per cent of agricultural GDP (or 0.07 per cent of total GDP), well below the globally recommended benchmark of one per cent of agricultural GDP.

Only one per cent of the demand for paddy seed is estimated to be met by supply in Myanmar, compared to nearly 100 per cent in Thailand and Vietnam. Private investment can play a critical role in addressing these constraints, private investment which regulatory reforms can help unleash.

Similarly, reforms in the land sector to increase security of tenure have had strong positive impacts on productivity in other countries in the region.

Myanmar Essential Services Lacking

Infrastructure such as healthcare in rural Myanmar is basic and in need of a dramatic overhaul
Infrastructure such as healthcare in rural Myanmar is basic and in need of a dramatic overhaul Photo: Courtesy The World Bank / Aye Zaw Myo

At present more than 80 per cent of the rural population lacks access to electricity, 37 per cent lack access to clean drinking water, and only 12 per cent of roads are paved, leaving many impassable in the rainy season. This contributes to rural isolation, and limits access of rural people to markets, job opportunities, and services.

Overcoming such constraints, if done in a way that empowers rural communities, could also help reduce geographic isolation and foster national unity by demonstrating the state’s support for lagging regions. This includes in particular ethnic minority and border areas, which have been affected by conflict and where the presence of the state remains limited and sometimes contested.

Some of these policies, reforms and investments may involve increased spending, as is happening already: from 2012 to 2015, the level of general purpose transfers from the union level to States and Regions has increased from 0.6 per cent of GDP to 2.3 per cent.

This allows States and Regions to fund important economic services (such as local roads, transport and communications, small scale energy projects, and cottage industries) that are critical to rural development. At the same time, changing the ways of doing business will be important to make public spending more effective, including empowering communities to lead local development efforts.

Improved Infrastructure

The country’s national community-driven development program, launched in 2013, is demonstrating the impact of transferring grants for community-level infrastructure directly to village tract committees, elected by secret ballot with gender parity.

Rolled out first in 27 rural townships across the country, some 3.1 million rural people have so far gained access to improved community infrastructure through the program. More than two thirds of households in project communities have participated in planning, decision-making, and implementation of subprojects, and 75 per cent of community members report high or very high satisfaction levels.

In a situation of significant needs and limited resources, prioritisation of where to spend public resources and identifying what programs work is key. Generating the knowledge and systems to allow such prioritisation to be made will be critical, both to help distinguish different groups (eg. the poor from the non-poor) and to identify programs that are delivering results and should be scaled up, versus those that aren’t and should be phased out.

Several measures can help improve information available for better targeting. The 2014 National Population and Housing Census put forward a rich snapshot of Myanmar’s townships and states and regions (See: 2014 Myanmar Census – Everything You Need to Know About Myanmar). Subsequent follow-up surveys, including the 2015 Myanmar Poverty and Household Living Conditions Survey, provide a more complete snapshot of the needs and profile of the poor.

For the future, more frequent and better quality data on living conditions can help to establish a household level targeting system that could identify and deliver support to those who are most in need. At the same time independent, high-quality and regular impact monitoring of rural development programs can help to identify the strongest performing programs and make these available more widely.

Change is underway and moving fast in Myanmar. Ensuring that rural areas keep pace is critical to promoting unity and shared prosperity in a diverse and thriving country.

 

This article was written by Nikolas Win Myint, Andrea Woodhouse, and Sergiy Zorya and first appeared on The World Bank blog. A version of this article appeared in the Global New Light of Myanmar.

 

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Established in 1944 and headquartered in Washington, DC, The World Bank is a United Nations international financial institution that provides loans to developing countries for Capital programs.

The World Bank Group consists of: The International Bank for Reconstruction and Development, The International Development Association, The International Finance Corporation, The Multilateral Investment Guarantee Agency, and The International Centre for Settlement of Investment Disputes.

By 2030 The World Bank aims to:
1. End extreme poverty by decreasing the percentage of people living on less than $1.25 a day to no more than 3%.

2. Promote shared prosperity by fostering the income growth of the bottom 40% for every country.

It aims to achieve this by providing low-interest loans, zero to low-interest credits, and grants to developing countries.

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