Agrarian Reform in The Philippines
Agrarian Reform in The Philippines
Agrarian Reform in The Philippines
Reform in the
Philippines
Agrarian reform Defined
The transfer of control and ownership of agricultural
land to the actual tillers.
Agrarian Reform
By the Americans
Aquino Administration
PHASE 3
Divided into two –sub phases and has a combines
coverage of 1.35 million hectares
Phase 3-A was supposed to cover private
agricultural lands of 24 to 50 hectares
Phase 3-B is supposed to cover private farmlands of
areas above the retention limit up to 24 hectares
The program has different modes of land acquisition
and redistribution
For public lands, which comprise more than half of
the target land reform, distribution is done through
either Free Patents for Alienable and Disposable (A
& D) lands, Certificates od Land Ownership Awards
(CLOAs)
For resettlement sites, or stewardship contracts for
public lands covered by the integrated Social
Forestry program (ISFP)
FOR PRIVATE LANDS
Compulsory acquisition (CA) is the main mode to be
used in expropriating land whose owners did not
voluntary offer them for land reform
CARP was originally conceived to need around p221
billion which covers both the land acquisition cost and
the package of support infrastructure, both physical and
social
CARP defers land redistribution of commercial farms,
defined as private lands over five hectares devoted to
livestock, poultry, aquaculture including salt beds.
Fishponds are prawn farms, fruit farms, orchards,
vegetable and cut-flower farms, and cacao, coffee and
rubber plantations. These will be subject to expropriation
only after 10 years from June 15, 1988
Exemptions and Exclusions
Distribution Limit