• Home
  • Politics
  • Health
  • World
  • Business
  • Finance
  • Tech
  • More
    • Sports
    • Entertainment
    • Lifestyle
What's Hot

China’s 618 shopping festival growth slows sharply as consumer spending malaise persists

June 23, 2026

Democrats Are Turning Out In Droves — Even In MAGA Country

June 23, 2026

Clive Davis, Grammy-Winning Record Producer and Music Industry Titan Who Signed Springsteen and Whitney Houston, Dies at 94

June 23, 2026
Facebook Twitter Instagram
  • Contact
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms & Conditions
Tuesday, June 23
Patriot Now NewsPatriot Now News
  • Home
  • Politics

    Democrats Are Turning Out In Droves — Even In MAGA Country

    June 23, 2026

    Trump’s Midterm Election Rigging Scheme Handed Big Loss

    June 23, 2026

    Senate Passes Major Housing Bill As Citizens Continue To Miss Out On Key Pillar Of American Dream

    June 22, 2026

    Trump Melts Down When Reporters Challenge His Reflecting Pool Vandalism Story

    June 22, 2026

    Democrats Prove They Hate Trump More Than Death, Destruction And Economic Depression

    June 22, 2026
  • Health

    Kidney transplant, livestock disease, Texas: Morning Rounds

    June 22, 2026

    The Hidden Hormone Controlling Your Energy, Mood, And Recovery

    June 22, 2026

    A New Way To Hit Pancreatic Cancer’s Hardest Target

    June 22, 2026

    Ebola Congo: 1,000 cases, 254 deaths, still a search for patient zero

    June 22, 2026

    What GenAI’s Math Breakthrough Means For Medicine

    June 22, 2026
  • World

    51 Dead or Missing After Migrant Boat Capsized Off Libya Coast

    June 23, 2026

    World Cup Tourists Share First Impressions Of The U.S.

    June 23, 2026

    Leftist Terrorist With Airline Hijack Links on Party Ballot in Germany

    June 23, 2026

    Reactions To ‘Comic Book Villain’ Hired to Fix Reflecting Pool

    June 23, 2026

    Iran Cash Needs to Be in Escrow, Sometimes They Act Like They Won

    June 22, 2026
  • Business

    Influential Economic Policy Center Bankrolled By Shady Dating App Founder

    June 19, 2026

    Dem Senator‘s 22-Year-Old Son Raises Eyeballs After Raking In $30 Million Investment

    June 19, 2026

    Jeff Bezos Claims AI Boom Will Actually Lead To Labor Shortages

    June 17, 2026

    Are You Gay Enough To Get A California Utilities Contract? Here’s The Test

    June 17, 2026

    Jersey Mike’s Overtakes Chick-Fil-A As Highest Rated Fast Food Chain

    June 17, 2026
  • Finance

    China’s 618 shopping festival growth slows sharply as consumer spending malaise persists

    June 23, 2026

    Borrowing need will dictate your interest rate

    June 23, 2026

    52-year-old Outback Steakhouse rival chain closes 24 locations

    June 22, 2026

    Ex-Trump advisor makes bold case for Bitcoin

    June 22, 2026

    Is Ford Motor Company (F) One of the Best EV Stocks to Invest In According to Hedge Funds?

    June 22, 2026
  • Tech

    Netflix’s Mega Podcast Venture Failing to Earn Fans

    June 23, 2026

    Texas Grandma Killed by Tesla Crashing into Home, Driver Claims ‘Autopilot’ Active

    June 22, 2026

    Asbestos Discovered in 1,000 UK Wind Turbines Imported from China

    June 22, 2026

    ‘F**k These Weird Ass Vultures’

    June 22, 2026

    Federal Appeals Court Allows Ohio to Enforce Social Media Law Requiring Parental Consent for Minors

    June 22, 2026
  • More
    • Sports
    • Entertainment
    • Lifestyle
Patriot Now NewsPatriot Now News
Home»Finance»Palm Oil Smallholders in Indonesia Need Government Help, Not Hindrance
Finance

Palm Oil Smallholders in Indonesia Need Government Help, Not Hindrance

August 8, 2024No Comments7 Mins Read
Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email
Palm Oil Smallholders in Indonesia Need Government Help, Not Hindrance
Share
Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email

Indonesia’s palm oil industry is a stark contrast of wealth and poverty.

While corporations reap billions in revenue, villagers living near oil palm plantations suffer. They  lose access to farm and forest land, and many struggle to find work. 

Independent oil palm smallholders have potential to prosper with oil palm, and so far they have planted 36 percent of Indonesia’s oil palm area. Official data clearly show the contribution smallholders make to the national economy, yet the government offers them little support. Several government policies actually hinder smallholder prosperity, especially policies concerning land laws, finance, and the favored model of production.

Unfair Land Laws

Indonesia’s land laws provide scant security to oil palm smallholders, most of whom do not have land titles. The laws favor corporations, and give government officials the right to issue corporate land concessions on state-claimed land that may have been occupied and used by smallholders for generations. 

When a corporation arrives, smallholders have two choices. They can accept whatever compensation the corporation offers – usually very little – or they can mobilize collectively to attempt to prevent the corporation from bulldozing their farms, actions that sometimes result in imprisonment, injury or death.

While corporations can apply to the government to have state forest land released for plantation development, smallholders do not have this privilege. A 2017 land reform program that promised to release 4.1 million hectares of state forest land to smallholders so they could legalize their land tenure has stalled, meeting less than 1 percent of its target.

While smallholders remain in legal limbo, plantation corporations are allowed to break the law with impunity. A government audit found that corporations had planted more than 2 million hectares of oil palm illegally inside state forest boundaries, but officials decided not to evict them. Instead, the government offered an amnesty and legalized the plantations retrospectively.

Thus far, the government has granted more than 10,000 concessions to oil palm corporations. Together they occupy around 22 million hectares – a third of Indonesia’s farmland. This is an area so vast that in some districts smallholders are surrounded by plantations on all sides and struggle to access land on which they can grow oil palm and other crops.

See also  From BlackRock to Pimco, Bond Investors Bet Fed Hiking Is Over

Since the land concessions are renewable, smallholders are locked out of farming now and for generations to come. Smallholders could become prosperous if the government stopped granting new corporate land concessions and proceeded rapidly with the promised land reform. With enough land they could also maintain diverse crops as a strategy to manage market and climate risks. Unlike corporations with thousands of hectares planted with just one crop, smallholders can more readily adapt.

Fraught Financing

Smallholders lacking land titles cannot use their land as collateral for bank loans, so they pay a high price for credit. 

Corporations are given a much better deal. They are permitted to use their concession licenses as collateral to obtain financing from Indonesian and foreign banks. Through the concession system, corporations are not only able to access land virtually free of charge, but their access to capital is highly subsidized as well.

Despite the lack of government-supported subsidies, smallholders have still managed to plant millions of hectares of oil palm. They finance their investments by saving in credit unions, borrowing from local sources, and expanding their oil palm holdings gradually as their funds allow. But lack of finance does hold them back; few can afford to buy the good quality, high-yielding seeds that corporations use, hindering their prosperity.

Like other Indonesians, smallholders value their autonomy or “standing on their own two feet.” In the realm of finance, this means they seek credit arrangements that are flexible and, above all, transparent. Existing smallholder finance schemes run by the government or plantation corporations do not have these characteristics. Some schemes require smallholders to release their land and place it under corporate control. They also saddle them with debts that may be manipulated.

See also  Government of Greece Hacked U.S. Citizen Working for Facebook

A government fund to finance smallholders who need to replant their aged palms is immensely complex and bureaucratic, and smallholders are staying away. They prefer to seek finance independently rather than lose control over their finances and farms.

Indonesia’s smallholders growing crops such as coffee, cacao, and rubber make their own decisions about what to plant and where. They access credit on transparent terms and they sell their crop freely to traders they trust. In the case of smallholder cacao, these arrangements worked with “spectacular efficiency.”

Current policies for oil palm work against these bottom-up financial arrangements.

Smallholders would find government-subsidized credit and cheap access to high quality seeds very helpful, but not if it reduces the flexibility and autonomy they rely on to protect themselves from unfair dealings and achieve prosperity on their own terms.

An Inefficient Production Model

Indonesia’s land laws and finance policies favor a plantation-based production model, with the expectation that giant plantations are more efficient than smallholdings due to economies of scale. But smallholders can grow as much oil palm per hectare as plantations, so long as they have access to high quality seeds and financing for fertilizers.

The challenge with oil palm is not growing the palms, it is transportation. The fresh fruit bunches must reach a mill within 48 hours before they spoil. Under the plantation-based model, corporations install mega plantations and centralized mills served by huge trucks plying thousands of kilometers of plantation roads.

Yet this centralized model is not especially efficient. Corporations have built huge mills with double the necessary capacity so they are often idle; plantation roads are hugely expensive to maintain and may be impassable in the rainy season, leaving piles of palm fruit to rot; and trucks have to queue for hours or days to offload the fresh fruit at the mill.

A smallholder-friendly policy would encourage the building of multiple small mills, each equipped to handle fruit from the surrounding 500 hectares, accessible using small trucks and regular village roads. This model is already in operation in parts of Sumatra where independent smallholders dominate, but in Kalimantan mega-plantations and mega-mills dominate.

See also  Oil Plunge Deepens as Concerns Over Economy Drive Selloff

Single giant mills are the enemy of smallholder prosperity, as they rob smallholders of bargaining power. Obliging smallholders to sell their fruit through cooperatives – often a condition of government or corporate smallholder schemes – presents the same, single-buyer problem. 

Smallholders prosper when they cooperate among themselves on their own terms, sell freely to mills that treat them fairly, and guard their independence.

Toward Smallholder Prosperity 

Current government policies hinder the prosperity of oil palm smallholders in Indonesia who face adverse land laws, corporate dominance, and a lack of effective government support.

Two myths stand in the way of meaningful reform: the myth that corporations are efficient and the myth that smallholders lack the ambition and skill to meet global demand for this important crop. The evidence suggests otherwise. Indonesia’s colonial era rubber plantations were rapidly outcompeted by smallholders. Cacao and coffee have always been smallholder crops, and oil palm could be as well if policies shifted.

In Thailand – the world’s third largest oil palm producer – 70 percent of the crop is grown by smallholders with an average plot size of 4 hectares, backed by government programs that offer appropriate technical and financial support.

Indonesia’s smallholders say 6 hectares of oil palm is a good number: The revenue from 2 hectares is enough to cover the farm’s costs, 2 hectares covers family living costs, and 2 hectares provides an investment fund for education and setting up the next generation. Add another 2 hectares and they can send their children to college.

With the right policies, millions of Indonesian smallholders could achieve prosperity with oil palm. It is well within reach.

Research funding was provided by Canada’s Social Science and Humanities Research Council, the University of Toronto, and Universitas Gadjah Mada.

Originally published under Creative Commons by 360info™.

government Hindrance Indonesia Oil Palm Smallholders
Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email

Related Posts

China’s 618 shopping festival growth slows sharply as consumer spending malaise persists

June 23, 2026

Borrowing need will dictate your interest rate

June 23, 2026

52-year-old Outback Steakhouse rival chain closes 24 locations

June 22, 2026

Ex-Trump advisor makes bold case for Bitcoin

June 22, 2026
Add A Comment

Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

Top Posts

White House Covid adviser calls on docs to combat misinformation

April 2, 2023

Taylor Swift hands out ‘life-changing’ bonus checks to every person working on record-setting Eras Tour

August 3, 2023

Conservatives Who Understand AI Will ‘Prevail on the Battlefield of Ideas’

May 4, 2026

Survivor Crowns Season 50 Winner and Launches Season 51: The Open Era

May 21, 2026
Don't Miss

China’s 618 shopping festival growth slows sharply as consumer spending malaise persists

Finance June 23, 2026

Citizens gather to purchase and scratch instant lottery tickets at a lottery ticket booth on…

Democrats Are Turning Out In Droves — Even In MAGA Country

June 23, 2026

Clive Davis, Grammy-Winning Record Producer and Music Industry Titan Who Signed Springsteen and Whitney Houston, Dies at 94

June 23, 2026

Cops Investigate Assault Claims Against Jets QB Geno Smith

June 23, 2026
About
About

This is your World, Tech, Health, Entertainment and Sports website. We provide the latest breaking news straight from the News industry.

We're social. Connect with us:

Facebook Twitter Instagram Pinterest
Categories
  • Business (4,386)
  • Entertainment (5,255)
  • Finance (3,885)
  • Health (2,326)
  • Lifestyle (1,893)
  • Politics (3,652)
  • Sports (4,615)
  • Tech (2,295)
  • Uncategorized (4)
  • World (5,162)
Our Picks

‘Real Housewives’ Star Shannon Beador Arrested for DUI, Hit-and-Run

September 19, 2023

Student loan borrowers at risk of scams as payments restart, says FTC

September 15, 2023

Former CIA Agent Tried to Hide Role at Twitter After Smearing Hunter Biden ‘Laptop from Hell’ Story

September 1, 2023
Popular Posts

China’s 618 shopping festival growth slows sharply as consumer spending malaise persists

June 23, 2026

Democrats Are Turning Out In Droves — Even In MAGA Country

June 23, 2026

Clive Davis, Grammy-Winning Record Producer and Music Industry Titan Who Signed Springsteen and Whitney Houston, Dies at 94

June 23, 2026
© 2026 Patriotnownews.com - All rights reserved.
  • Contact
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms & Conditions

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.