VietNamNet Bridge – Not a few, but thousands of owners of farms and
householders throughout the country have given up the dream of owning livestock
farms. They tend to work as hired laborers for foreigners.
The wave of giving up self-employed business
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If referring to the old definition about farm economy, by 2010, Vietnam had had 150,000 farms, including 20,000 livestock farms, which means that the country had had 150,000 farm owners.
However, analysts have pointed out that over the
last five years, especially since 2008, they can see a new wave where the owners
stop doing their own business to shift for doing the outsourcing for foreign
enterprises.
No official statistics have been released about the number of farms’ owners and
households who have been running breeding farms for foreigners.
However, the 100
percent foreign invested CP Vietnam, a subsidiary of the Thailand-based Charoen
Pokphand Group, alone has had 3000 Vietnamese “satellite” farms to date. In a
recent press conference, Sooksunt Jiumjaiswanglerg, General Director of the
company, revealed that up to 20,000 Vietnamese farmers are working for CP
Vietnam.
Many other foreign livestock groups have also set foot in Vietnam, and
established their subsidiaries in the country. These include Malaysian Emivet
and Indonesian Jappa which have signed the contracts with Vietnamese farmers,
under which Vietnamese farmers breed fowl for the groups.
It is still unclear about the farming scale of the contracts, but analysts are
sure that the value of the contracts is very big, because the two “big guys”,
together with CP Vietnam, are now the three main chicken suppliers in Vietnam.
Preferring working as hired laborers than the bosses
Why don’t Vietnamese farmers want to run their farms as owners, but want to do
the outsourcing for foreigners?
The answers given by the farmers are that they are too afraid of epidemics, they
fear the market instability and they lack capital or have to bear overly high
interest rates (the average lending interest rate is 20 percent per annum).
Nguyen Thanh Le, a farmer in Xeo Vong hamlet of Hiep Loi commune of Hau Giang
province, who is breeding fowl for Emivet Vietnam, a subsidiary of Malaysian
Emivet Group, said that his farm once had 15,000 fowl which had the investment
capital of 1.5 billion dong. However, he has to run a fowl for the foreign
invested enterprise because he did not have enough money to run the farm of his
own.
“Only if the feed price stabilizes, the demand is good, and commercial banks
agree to give support, will we be able to make investment in farming and run the
farms independently,” he said.
The animal epidemics which broke out in recent years, such as the blue ear
epidemic on pigs and bird flu epidemic on poultry, have frightened Vietnamese
farmers. As incurring heavy debts, a lot of farmers and households have left
farms idle or given up farming.
Nguyen Van Loc, the runner of the pig farm in Tan Linh Commune of Ba Vi district
in Hanoi, who is working for CP Vietnam, said that Vietnam always remains
passive in preventing epidemics. Vietnamese agencies only seek to buy vaccines
and discuss treatment solutions when epidemics break out already. In many cases,
agencies ask farmers to slaughter sick pigs, but this is the thing no one wants
to do, because this also means that they will become penniless.
Meanwhile, foreign invested enterprises always follow a very strict procedure in
farming. Only the best pigs can be used as breeders, while there is always an
engineer in charge of technical issues at every farm who can discover problems
soon and find out reasonable treatments immediately.
Therefore, Loc said farmers still prefer working as hired laborers to running
their business themselves, even though they cannot get much money as hired
laborers.
Dan Viet
