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Comprehensive Agrarian Reform Program

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The Comprehensive Agrarian Reform Program, more commonly known as CARP, is an agrarian reform law of the Philippines whose legal basis is the Republic Act No. 6657,[1] otherwise known as the Comprehensive Agrarian Reform Law (CARL), signed under the administration of President Cory Aquino.[2] It is the redistribution of private and public agricultural lands to help the beneficiaries survive as small independent farmers, regardless of the “tenurial” arrangement. Its goals are to provide landowners equality in terms of income and opportunities, empower land owner beneficiaries to have equitable land ownership, enhance agricultural production and productivity, provide employment to more agricultural workers, and put an end to conflicts regarding land ownership.

Background

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The agrarian reform is part of the long history of attempts of land reform in the Philippines.[3] The law was outlined by former President Corazon C. Aquino through Presidential Proclamation 131 and Executive Order 229 on June 22, 1987,[4] and it was enacted by the 8th Congress of the Philippines and signed by Aquino on June 10, 1988. In 1998, which was the year that it was scheduled to be completed, the Congress enacted Republic Act No. 8532 [5] to allocate additional funds for the program and extending the automatic appropriation of ill-gotten wealth recovered by the Presidential Commission on Good Government (PCGG) for CARP until the year 2008.[6]

An amendatory law, CARPER or the Comprehensive Agrarian Reform Program Extension with Reforms or the Republic Act. 9700 was passed. It extended the deadline of distributing agricultural lands to the farmers for an additional five years. This law also amends other provisions and regulations formerly stated in the CARP. It was signed into law on August 7, 2009, and was set to be accomplished by the year 2014.[7]

Key components

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The implementation of the Comprehensive Agrarian Reform Program relies heavily on the Department of Agrarian Reform (DAR). As the lead implementing agency, the DAR has the responsibility in carrying out the principal aspects of the program, which are Land Tenure Improvement (LTI), Program Beneficiary Development (PBD), and the Agrarian Justice Delivery (AJD).

The Land Tenure Improvement is highly recognized as the most integral aspect of the program. This component seeks to secure the tenurial status of the farmers and farmworkers. The DAR implements this component through Land Acquisition and Distribution (LAD) or Non-land Transfer Schemes.

The Land Acquisition and Distribution involves the redistribution of private and government-owned land to landless farmers and farm workers. Under Section 6 of RA 9700 ( Section 16 of RA 6657 as amended) regarding Land Acquisition, the DAR identifies lands that are eligible for distribution under the CARP with accordance to the law, acquires the land by delivering a notice containing the offer with its corresponding value to the owner should he choose to accept the payment. Following the acquisition of lands under Section 11 of RA 9700(Section 26 of RA 6657 as amended) the DAR distributes these to the qualified beneficiaries, who then pay for the land through the Land Bank of the Philippines or directly to their former owners.[8]

Under the CARP, a total target of 10.3 million hectares of land was programmed to be distributed over a span of ten years. Out of the total land, 6.5 million hectares of public disposal lands and Integrated Social Forestry areas are to be distributed by the Department of Environment and Natural Resources (DENR) while 3.8 million hectares of private agricultural lands are to be distributed by the DAR. From July 1987 to June 1992, the DAR was able to distribute 1.77 million hectares benefiting .933 million beneficiaries, while the DENR has distributed 1.88 million hectares to .760 million farmers.[9]

Leasehold Operations is the alternative non-land transfer scheme that covers all tenanted agricultural lands in retained areas and in yet to be acquired or distributed lands. Under this component, the DAR mediates between the landowners and tenants so that their share tenancy arrangement could be turned into a leasehold agreement, whereby the beneficiaries will pay a fixed fee based on their own historical production records instead of paying a large percentage share of their produce to the landowner.[10]

The Program Beneficiaries Development is a support service delivery component of CARP. It aims to aid the agrarian reform beneficiaries by providing them necessary support services to make their lands more productive, and enable them to venture in income generating livelihood projects in accordance to Section 14 of RA 9700(Section 37 of RA 6657 as amended) .[11] Under the support service delivery programs, the Presidential Agrarian Reform Council(PARC) ensures that agrarian reform beneficiaries are provided with support services such as land surveys and tilting, construction of infrastructures, marketing and production assistance, credit and training.[8]

Agrarian Justice Delivery provides agrarian legal assistance and oversees the adjudication of cases. Under Section 19 of RA 97600 (Section 50 of RA 6657 as amended), the DAR is hereby vested with the primary jurisdiction to determine and adjudicate agrarian reform matters and shall have exclusive original jurisdiction over all matters involving the implementation of agrarian reform except those falling under the exclusive jurisdiction of the Department of Agriculture (DA) and the Department of Environment and Natural Resources (DENR).[2]

The Agrarian Legal Assistance is under the Bureau of Legal Assistance (BALA). The BALA provides legal assistance to the beneficiaries affected by agrarian cases, particularly those whose legal rights as ARB's are challenged by landowners.

The Adjudication of Cases involves the adjudication of cases by the Department of Agrarian Reform Adjudication Board (DARAB). The adjudication of cases deals with disputes pertaining to tenancy relations; valuation of lands acquired by DAR under compulsory acquisition mode; rights and obligations of persons, whether natural or juridical, engaged in the management cultivation and use of all agricultural lands; ejectment and dispossession of tenants/leaseholders; review of leasehold rentals; and other similar disputes.[10]

Development

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At the end of the 20th century, the population of the Philippines increased rapidly to 75.32 million in a country of 297,410 square kilometers, with an average family size of six, making the Philippines known for high population density. In addition to this, with a population growth of 2.02 per year, the Philippine population is expected to double in the span of 25 years. 60 percent of the Philippine population is rural, and over 12 million Filipinos make a living directly from agricultural cultivation. Around 9.5 million hectares of land across the Philippines are used to plan various crops. In terms of landlessness, the number of landless agricultural families rose up from 5 million to 11.32 million families. Out of these 11.32 families, 4.6 million make a living from lands they don't own. 0.70 million are rented, 2 million are laborers, while 1.9 million are farming as tenants.[9]

Land reform under Aquino administration (1986–1992)

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During the start of President Corazon Aquino's term in 1986, the Constitutional Commission approved Section 21 under Article II, which states that “The State shall promote comprehensive rural development and agrarian reform.” This led to the drafting of CARP, which took the Congress a year to make. On June 10, 1988, Republic Act No. 6657, also known as the Comprehensive Agrarian Reform Law (CARL), was passed to promote social justice and industrialization. Although it was still a product of adherence to democratic principles, this law was found to have many flaws. Because of much dissatisfaction with the agrarian reform law, proposals from peasant groups and non-government organizations grew in order to implement an alternative program that was more advantageous to them. However, this did not succeed.

CARP recognizes not only farmers but all landless workers as beneficiaries with the condition that they cultivate the land. The two main departments in charge of this program are Department of Agrarian Reform (DAR) and Department of Environment and Natural Resources (DENR). Aside from the land distribution, it also provides the delivery of support services and security to the farmers.

Under the Aquino administration, a total of 898,420 landless tenants and farmers became recipients of land titles and support services. Even with this, it can be considered unsuccessful because it only accomplished 22.5 percent of land distribution in 6 years. This was due to the fact that Aquino assigned 4 different DAR secretaries. The major setback for CARP was Aquino's Hacienda Luisita's Stock Distribution Option, which says that she was the first landlord to evade CARP on a grand scale.

Land reform under Ramos administration (1992–1998)

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The policies on agrarian reform under the Ramos administration focused on accelerating the direct land transfer and non-land transfer through adopting more rational, fair and inexpensive settlements. It encouraged landowners to invest in rural-based industries that are connected to agriculture. It made an amendment to Section 63 of CARL to increase the fund of this project to 100 billion. Salaries of workers and members of DAR board were increased to motivate them for more successful results as well.

The target land to be given to farmer beneficiaries under this Administration was 3.4 million hectares, 4.7 million or 60 percent of which was successfully distributed. It achieved more than double the output of the Aquino administration. It focused on “less contentious landholdings and acquisition modes,” where they chose to work with autonomous NGOs and peasant organizations. However, controversies were unavoidable as they encountered landlords openly harassing peasants with guns and forcing them out of the lands.

Land reform under Estrada administration (1998–2001)

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This administration focused on fast tracking land acquisition and distribution. It wanted to reduce uncertainties in land market in rural places to help farmers’ efficiency and private investment to grow. It encouraged joint ventures, corporative, contact farming and other marketing arrangements to protect the status of stakeholders and promotion of agri-industrialization. They also improved the databases of the implementing agencies of DAR and DENR to fully record and update the lands covered. Estrada highlighted that there was a need to conceptualize new approaches in doing things to build a new social agreement where producers, government and private sectors work with a common goal.

The program encountered some problems such as strong landowners' resistance. Tenants also complained on the limited amount of fund allocation provided by the government for the project. It aimed to complete 7.8 million hectares by 2004. Since President Estrada lasted only 2.5 years as president, the total beneficiaries of CARP was only 0.18 million or 10 percent.[12]

Comprehensive Agrarian Reform Program Extension with Reforms (CARPER)

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Comprehensive Agrarian Reform Program Extension with Reforms, known also as CARPER or CARPer, (Republic Act 9700)[13] is the amendatory law that extends again the deadline of distributing agricultural lands to farmers for five years. It also amends other provisions stated in CARP.

In December 2008, the budget for CARP expired and there remained 1.2 million hectares of agricultural land waiting to be acquired and distributed to farmers. CARPER was signed into law on August 7, 2009, by Gloria Macapagal Arroyo and was set to expire on June 30, 2014.[14] However the program of distributing lands to farmer-beneficiaries continued even after June 2014. Section 30 of RA 9700 or CARPER law states that cases on the matter which are still pending "shall be allowed to proceed to its finality and be executed even beyond such date."[15]

Beneficiaries

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Beneficiaries of CARPER are landless farmers, including agricultural lessees, tenants, as well as regular, seasonal and other farmworkers. In a certain landholding, the qualified beneficiaries who are tenants and regular farmworkers will receive 3 hectares each before distributing the remaining land to the other qualified beneficiaries like seasonal farmworks and other farmworkers (Section 22 of CARL). The Department of Agrarian Reform (DAR) identifies and screens potential beneficiaries and validates their qualifications. Beneficiaries must be least 15 years old, be a resident of the barangay where the land holding is located, and own no more than 3 hectares of agricultural land.[16]

The CARPER law has bias for organized farmers to be beneficiaries because the Congress believes that the success rate of organized farmers is high and can make their awarded lands productive.[citation needed]

Significant provisions

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  • Gender-Sensitive Agrarian Reform – Section 1 of the CARPER law states that "The State shall recognize and enforce, consistent with existing laws, the rights of rural women to own and control land, taking into consideration the substantive equality between men and women as qualified beneficiaries, to receive a just share of the fruits thereof, and to be represented in advisory or appropriate decision-making bodies. These rights shall be independent of their male relatives and of their civil status." Rural women will have a representative in the highest policy making body of DAR – the Presidential Agrarian Reform Council (PARC).
  • Budget – Section 21 amending Section 63 for CARL state that the budget allocated for the 5-year extension is 150 Billion pesos which will be sourced from three funds: Agrarian Reform Fund, General Appropriations Acts (GAA) and other sources of funding like privatization of government asset, foreign donors, etc. This budget is the largest per year in the history of CARP.
  • Creation of a Congressional Oversight Committee – Section 26 of the CARPER law created a joint Congressional Oversight Committee to oversee and monitor the implementation of the act, which will be composed of the Chairpersons of the Committee on Agrarian Reform of both Houses of Congress, three Members of the House of Representatives, and three Members of the Senate of the Philippines, to be designated respectively by the Speaker of the House of Representatives and the President of the Senate of the Philippines. The chairpersons of the COCAR are the Chairpersons of the Committees on Agrarian Reform of the House of Representatives and of the Senate of the Philippines. The term of the COCAR will end six months after the expiration of the extended period of five years. The COCAR is provided with twenty-five million pesos (P25,000,000.00) every year.
  • CARPER as a Continuing Program – Section 30 of the CARPER law mandates that “any case and/or proceeding involving the implementation of the provisions of Republic Act No. 6657, as amended, which may remain pending on June 30, 2014 shall be allowed to proceed to its finality and be executed even beyond such date". Section 30 of CARPER law provides a way to legally continue the implementation of pending CARP cases after the 5-year extension by filling the initiatory process of CARP.
  • Policies in Converting Agricultural Lands – Section 73 of the CARPER law: "Any conversion by any landowner of his/her agricultural land into any non-agricultural use with intent to avoid the application of this Act to his/her landholdings and to dispossess his/her bonafide tenant farmers." Failure to comply will result in an imprisonment of 6 to 12 years and/or a penalty of 200,000 pesos to 1 million pesos. The CARPER law prohibits any conversion of irrigated and irrigable lands and mandates the National Irrigation Administration to identify these. CARPER law also states that non-implementation of the conversion plan will result to automatic coverage of the subject by CARP....

Achievements

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In 2003, 15 years into the program, studies funded by the United Nations Development Programme, Asian Development Bank, Food and Agriculture Organization, European Union, and the Philippine Government had shown that poverty incidence among program beneficiaries declined from 47.6 to 45.2 percent, while increasing among their non-participating counterparts from 55.1 to 56.4 percent.[17]

The Official Gazette released an update on the accomplishments in the field of agrarian reform as of June 30, 2014.

"As of December 31, 2013, the government has acquired and distributed 6.9 million hectares of land, equivalent to 88% of the total land subject to CARP." Of this area, the Aquino administration has distributed a total of 751,514 hectares, or 45% of the total landholdings to be distributed to the farmer beneficiaries left under this administration. From this, DAR has distributed 412,782 hectares and DENR has already distributed 338,732 hectares.[16]

In 2014 – 2016, Department of Agrarian Reform still needs to acquire 771,795 hectares (187,686 hectares in 2014; 198,631 hectares in 2015; and 385,478 hectares in 2016). The Department of Environment and Nation Resources still needs to acquire 134,857 hectares — a total of 906,652 hectares.

See also

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References

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Sources

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Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
The Comprehensive Agrarian Reform Program (CARP), enacted through Republic Act No. 6657 on June 10, 1988, constitutes the Philippine government's systematic initiative to redistribute agricultural lands to landless farmers and regular farmworkers, targeting all public and private agricultural lands irrespective of tenurial arrangements or commodities produced, with the explicit policy aim of advancing social justice, rural development, and equitable access to land as a productive resource.[1] [2] Envisioned under President Corazon Aquino's administration as a cornerstone of post-People Power reforms, CARP incorporated mechanisms such as voluntary land offers to the government, compulsory acquisition at market values, and alternative stock distribution options for corporate landowners, while mandating support services like credit, infrastructure, and training to enable beneficiaries' transition to viable farming.[1] [3] Over its initial 10-year timeline—later extended by Republic Act No. 9700 (CARPER) in 2009 to 2028—the program distributed approximately 4.8 million hectares to around 4.8 million beneficiaries, ostensibly fulfilling over 90% of its land acquisition targets by 2018 and altering tenure patterns in favor of smallholder ownership.[4] [5] However, empirical evaluations grounded in micro-level data underscore profound shortcomings: CARP fragmented average farm sizes by 37% and depressed agricultural output per hectare by 17%, as smaller plots proved inefficient for mechanization and scale economies, exacerbating rural underproductivity and failing to deliver sustained poverty reduction despite initial income gains for some recipients.[6] [7] [8] Controversies persist around CARP's design and execution, including landowner circumventions via legal loopholes, chronic underfunding of post-distribution support (which limited credit access and technical aid to below 20% of needs in many cases), and elite capture that perpetuated inequality, with quantitative analyses deeming it a net economic failure that hindered overall agricultural growth without comparable productivity boosts seen in peer reforms elsewhere.[9] [10] These outcomes reflect causal dynamics where compulsory redistribution overlooked farm-specific efficiencies and market incentives, fueling ongoing land disputes and calls for policy abandonment in favor of targeted productivity enhancements.[9][4]

Historical Origins

Pre-1988 Agrarian Policies

Prior to the enactment of the Comprehensive Agrarian Reform Program in 1988, Philippine agrarian policies were characterized by fragmented and limited initiatives aimed at addressing tenancy and land concentration, primarily in response to rural unrest and political pressures. These efforts began in the post-independence era but achieved modest redistribution, often constrained by elite resistance, inadequate funding, and narrow scope targeting only specific crops or regions.[11] The Land Reform Act of 1955 (Republic Act No. 1400), signed during President Ramon Magsaysay's administration on June 4, 1955, marked an early comprehensive attempt to establish a land tenure policy. It declared the state's intent to create conditions enabling tenants to become landowners or leaseholders on reasonable terms, establishing the Land Tenure Administration to purchase and resell estates exceeding 300 hectares for individuals or 600 hectares for corporations to bonafide farmers. Implementation was hampered by insufficient government funds and legal challenges from landowners, resulting in only about 120,000 hectares distributed by the early 1960s.[12][13] Subsequent policies under Presidents Diosdado Macapagal and Ferdinand Marcos expanded on these foundations but retained limitations. The Agricultural Land Reform Code of 1963 (Republic Act No. 3844) abolished share tenancy for all agricultural crops, converting tenants into leaseholders with secure rights and setting maximum lease rents at 25-30% of harvest value; however, it exempted export cash crops like sugar and coconut, covering primarily Central Luzon rice lands and benefiting fewer than 100,000 tenants due to slow adjudication.[14] Under martial law, President Marcos issued Presidential Decree No. 27 on October 21, 1972, decreeing the emancipation of tenants on rice and corn lands by transferring ownership of up to seven hectares per qualified tenant farmer, with landowners retaining no more than seven hectares. This applied exclusively to private tenanted lands devoted to rice and corn under sharecrop or lease systems, requiring tenants to pay amortized costs over 15 years at 6% interest, and led to the distribution of approximately 1.2 million hectares to over 800,000 beneficiaries by 1986. Critics noted its exclusion of other crops and lands, which shielded major landlords in export agriculture, though it represented the most significant pre-1988 redistribution effort amid Marcos's authoritarian control.[15][16][11] From 1972 to 1988, complementary decrees like Presidential Decree No. 85 (1974) incentivized voluntary land transfers with tax exemptions, while operations under the Department of Agrarian Reform—formed in 1978—focused on certificate of land transfer issuance and support services, yet overall progress stalled due to corruption allegations, bureaucratic inefficiencies, and the 1983-1985 economic crisis, leaving tenancy rates high at around 40% of farmland.[17]

Enactment under Aquino (1988)

The Comprehensive Agrarian Reform Law, formally Republic Act No. 6657, was signed into law by President Corazon C. Aquino on June 10, 1988, establishing the Comprehensive Agrarian Reform Program (CARP) as the state's mechanism for redistributing public and private agricultural lands to promote social justice, rural industrialization, and improved living standards for landless farmers.[18][19] The legislation mandated coverage of approximately 10.3 million hectares of agricultural land over a 10-year period, including rice and corn lands under prior presidential decrees, regardless of tenurial arrangements or crop types.[20][21] Enactment followed intense political pressure amid agrarian unrest, particularly after the Mendiola Massacre on January 22, 1987, when security forces fired on approximately 15,000 farmers marching to Malacañang Palace to demand land redistribution, resulting in 13 deaths and numerous injuries.[22][23] Aquino's administration, which had pledged comprehensive reform during the 1986 EDSA Revolution campaign against Ferdinand Marcos, initially delayed action due to opposition from agrarian elites, including her family's Hacienda Luisita estate, leading to a legislative compromise that incorporated voluntary offers from landowners (VOS) and retention limits of up to 5 hectares per family.[20][24] The bill originated in the Eighth Congress, with the Senate and House versions reconciled before presidential approval, reflecting a moderated approach compared to more radical proposals from farmer groups and leftist organizations that sought immediate expropriation without full market-value compensation.[18] The law took effect on July 15, 1988, 15 days after its publication in the Official Gazette, and created the Department of Agrarian Reform (DAR) to oversee implementation, alongside support agencies for credit, infrastructure, and training.[25][26] Critics, including peasant advocates, argued from the outset that provisions allowing stock-sharing alternatives to land transfer diluted the reform's emancipatory potential, prioritizing elite interests over tenant rights—a view substantiated by subsequent low distribution rates in private estates during the Aquino era.[20][23]

Program Framework

The Comprehensive Agrarian Reform Program (CARP) was established through Republic Act No. 6657, enacted on June 10, 1988, which serves as its primary legal foundation.[18] This legislation, signed into law by President Corazon C. Aquino, instituted a systematic redistribution of agricultural lands to qualified beneficiaries, encompassing all public and private agricultural lands regardless of tenurial arrangement or crop type.[18] The law's scope targeted approximately 10.3 million hectares of land, with implementation mechanisms including voluntary offers, compulsory acquisition, and summary administrative proceedings for disputes.[18] The core objectives of CARP, as articulated in Section 2 of RA 6657, center on pursuing agrarian reform to promote social justice, industrialization, and economic development.[18] Specifically, the program aims to liberate tillers from the bondage of the soil by providing them ownership of the land they till or equitable shares in its production, thereby improving their living conditions and enabling participation in national industrialization.[18] It seeks to redistribute excess lands beyond retention limits—set at 5 hectares per landowner—to landless farmers and farmworkers, while ensuring support services such as credit, infrastructure, and training to sustain productivity.[18] These goals are framed within a policy of equitable access to land as a means to reduce rural poverty and foster rural industrialization, with the state committing to just compensation for landowners based on market value considerations.[18] Subsequent amendments, notably Republic Act No. 9700 in 2009, extended CARP's timeline to June 30, 2014, and refined provisions on land acquisition and beneficiary support without altering the foundational objectives of land redistribution and social equity.[27] The program's legal framework emphasizes farmer participation through cooperatives and prioritizes agricultural lands unsuitable for industrial use, balancing reform with national food security and economic growth imperatives.[18]

Land Acquisition Mechanisms

The Comprehensive Agrarian Reform Program (CARP) employed three principal modes for acquiring agricultural lands: voluntary offer to sell (VOS), voluntary land transfer (VLT), and compulsory acquisition (CA). These mechanisms, established under Executive Order No. 229 (1987) and codified in Republic Act No. 6657 (1988), prioritized voluntary methods to expedite distribution while providing compulsory options for non-compliant landowners, subject to just compensation determined by factors including the land's productivity, market value, and tax declarations.[28][18] Acquisition targeted tenanted lands exceeding retention limits—five hectares per qualified owner—and idle or underdeveloped parcels, with Phase I emphasizing voluntary offers from high-priority estates like sugar and coconut plantations.[18] Under VOS, landowners could proactively offer eligible agricultural lands to the Department of Agrarian Reform (DAR) for purchase and redistribution, receiving incentives such as exemption from capital gains tax and an additional 5% cash payment beyond standard compensation.[28][18] The process required landowners to register offers within specified periods, followed by DAR valuation using guidelines from the Presidential Agrarian Reform Council (PARC), which considered local sales data and crop yields; accepted offers led to payment via the Land Bank of the Philippines (LBP) trust account, enabling DAR possession and title transfer to the Republic.[28] This mode facilitated faster implementation, as it bypassed disputes, though uptake was limited by landowners' preferences for higher private valuations.[18] VLT, also known as the direct payment scheme, allowed landowners to negotiate and transfer lands directly to qualified farmer-beneficiaries, bypassing full government intermediation, provided the agreement was approved by DAR and terms matched or exceeded government offers.[28][18] Initially restricted to submissions within the first year of CARP's implementation, this mechanism required mutual consent on price and conditions, with DAR ensuring beneficiary eligibility and equitable distribution; payments were financed through beneficiary amortizations to LBP over 30 years at 6% interest, offering a 2% rebate for punctual compliance.[28] VLT aimed to reduce administrative burdens but often encountered challenges from mismatched valuations and beneficiary identification delays.[18] Compulsory acquisition served as the default for lands not acquired voluntarily, enabling DAR to mandatorily expropriate excess holdings after identifying coverage via surveys and notices published in newspapers.[28][18] Landowners received a 15- to 30-day response period to accept or reject the DAR's valuation offer; rejection triggered administrative hearings or judicial appeals, with payment deposited into an LBP trust fund upon which DAR could take possession and secure transfer certificates of title.[28] Compensation across modes followed a formula blending cash (10-30% upfront, scaled by land size), LBP bonds redeemable over 10 years, stock shares in government corporations, or tax credits, ensuring landowners retained rights to improvements and crops at harvest.[18] Exemptions applied to lands over 18% slope, forests, or those vital for national development, preserving ecological and strategic priorities.[18]

Beneficiary Selection and Support Services

Beneficiary selection under the Comprehensive Agrarian Reform Program (CARP) is governed by Section 22 of Republic Act No. 6657, which prioritizes agricultural lessees and share tenants first, followed by regular farmworkers, seasonal farmworkers, other farmworkers, actual tillers or occupants of public lands, collective organizations of the above, and finally other individuals directly working on the land but not qualifying under prior categories.[29] Basic qualifications require beneficiaries to be Filipino citizens with the willingness, aptitude, and ability to cultivate the land productively; they must not own more than three hectares of agricultural land elsewhere and cannot be children of landowners or absentees.[30] The Department of Agrarian Reform (DAR) holds authority for identification, screening, and selection, involving registration, validation of claims, and exclusion of disqualified parties such as those with prior land ownership exceeding limits or lacking tillage involvement.[31] Support services form a core component of CARP to enhance land productivity and beneficiary sustainability, including access to credit, farm inputs, extension services, and infrastructure like farm-to-market roads and irrigation systems.[32] The DAR's Agrarian Reform Beneficiaries Development Services Program (ARBDSP) specifically targets farm productivity improvement, organizational strengthening for agrarian reform beneficiary organizations (ARBOs), credit facilitation, and partnerships for food production.[33] Additional services encompass marketing assistance, technical training, and rural infrastructure development, often coordinated with foreign-assisted projects to address post-distribution challenges like low yields due to inadequate inputs.[34] Empirical assessments indicate these services are critical for viability, as land awards alone often fail without complementary credit and extension, with studies noting persistent poverty among beneficiaries lacking such support.[35]

Implementation Timeline

Aquino Administration (1988–1992)

The Comprehensive Agrarian Reform Program (CARP), enacted through Republic Act No. 6657 on June 10, 1988, and effective from June 15, 1988, marked the Aquino administration's primary effort to redistribute approximately 10.3 million hectares of agricultural land to landless farmers and farmworkers over a 10-year period.[18][36] The law established mechanisms for voluntary offers to sell, compulsory acquisition, and stock distribution options, with an initial funding allocation of ₱50 billion to support land acquisition and beneficiary support services.[37] Implementation began under the Department of Agrarian Reform (DAR), targeting both private agricultural lands (about 3.8 million hectares) and public domain lands (about 6.5 million hectares managed partly by the Department of Environment and Natural Resources).[36] From 1988 to 1992, CARP distributed approximately 2.2 million hectares nationwide, benefiting around 1.1 million agrarian reform beneficiaries (ARBs), achieving about 21.4% of the overall target.[36] However, the majority of distributed land consisted of government-owned or public domain areas, with private agricultural lands comprising only about one-fourth of the total, as compulsory acquisition of private holdings progressed minimally and no significant expropriations occurred in the first three years.[38][36] Regional variations were notable; for instance, Region I accomplished 49.9% of its targets, while Regions V and VI lagged at 7.5% and 9.5%, respectively, reflecting disparities in land availability and administrative capacity.[36] Support services, including credit and infrastructure, were provided to ARBs via Certificates of Land Ownership Awards (CLOAs), but delivery was uneven due to funding shortfalls, with the Agrarian Reform Fund remitting only 53% of projected amounts.[36] Implementation faced substantial obstacles, including bureaucratic delays from multi-agency coordination involving DAR, the Land Bank of the Philippines, and registries of deeds, which created backlogs in surveys, valuations, and title transfers.[36] Landowner resistance was acute, particularly through exemptions for agribusiness plantations (often via stock distribution) and legal challenges to valuations, which Executive Order 405 in 1990 shifted to the Land Bank, exacerbating delays for over 9,000 claim folders covering 127,000 hectares.[38][36] Leadership instability, with four DAR secretaries amid scandals, further slowed progress, while high transaction costs and incomplete land titling hindered voluntary transfers.[38] Despite these issues, innovations like the LISTASAKA system streamlined some processes, setting the stage for accelerated distribution in subsequent years, though critics noted the program's non-redistributive tilt toward public lands limited its impact on private tenancy inequities.[36][38]

Ramos to Arroyo Administrations (1992–2009)

During the Ramos administration (1992–1998), the Department of Agrarian Reform (DAR) shifted focus toward accelerating land acquisition and distribution by prioritizing voluntary offers from landowners and establishing Agrarian Reform Communities (ARCs), which integrated land titles with credit, infrastructure, and technical support to improve beneficiary viability.[39] This approach aimed to address implementation bottlenecks from the Aquino era, with Secretary Ernesto Garilao emphasizing bundled services to sustain reform gains.[40] Cumulative land distribution under CARP reached approximately 4 million hectares by mid-1998, representing about 57% of the targeted private agricultural lands, though progress relied heavily on government-owned lands rather than contested private estates.[32] The Estrada administration (1998–2001) widened CARP coverage to additional landless peasants and fast-tracked acquisition processes, distributing 182,762 hectares during its tenure amid efforts to balance economic development with social equity in rural areas.[41] However, political instability, including Estrada's impeachment and ouster in January 2001, disrupted sustained momentum, with distribution relying on existing mechanisms like stock distribution options and leaseback arrangements that critics argued diluted direct ownership transfers.[32] Under the Arroyo administration (2001–2009), CARP implementation grappled with the program's original 1998 deadline extensions and mounting backlogs, as landowners increasingly pursued land use conversions to evade redistribution, with over 20,000 hectares of agricultural land converted annually in some periods.[42] The "Strong Republic" initiative distributed 250,000 hectares by emphasizing voluntary land transfers and agribusiness ventures, yet overall progress lagged targets due to legal challenges, underfunding, and preference for market-assisted mechanisms over compulsory acquisition.[43] By end-2002, cumulative distribution exceeded 5.82 million hectares benefiting around 3 million agrarian reform beneficiaries, though independent assessments highlighted discrepancies between notices of coverage and actual titled lands, with private haciendas remaining largely untouched.[37] Executive Order No. 151 in 2002 further promoted farmer cooperatives and credit access, but persistent elite resistance and inadequate support services limited effective tenure security.[44]

CARPER Extension (2009–2014)

Republic Act No. 9700, known as the Comprehensive Agrarian Reform Program Extension with Reforms (CARPER), was signed into law on August 7, 2009, by President Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo, extending the land acquisition and distribution provisions of the original Comprehensive Agrarian Reform Program (CARP) until June 30, 2014.[27] The legislation refined acquisition mechanisms by prioritizing compulsory processes for large estates, enhanced support services such as credit and infrastructure for beneficiaries, and imposed stricter penalties for violations including land conversions and corporate evasions.[45] It allocated funding from sources like the Agrarian Reform Fund, emphasizing completion of remaining targets covering private agricultural lands exceeding five hectares, public lands, and unsettled claims.[4] Under the extension, the Department of Agrarian Reform (DAR) intensified efforts amid the transition from the Arroyo to the Aquino administration in 2010, with President Benigno Aquino III committing in 2012 to distribute all remaining lands by the deadline, targeting approximately 962,000 hectares still undistributed at that point.[46] Annual accomplishments included 111,889 hectares distributed to 63,755 agrarian reform beneficiaries in 2011, contributing to cumulative CARP distributions approaching 4.8 million hectares by 2014.[47] In the first quarter of 2014 alone, DAR acquired and distributed 26,421 hectares, reducing the backlog but leaving over 513,000 hectares pending as the program expired.[48] Challenges during implementation included landowner resistance through legal injunctions and appeals, insufficient funding amid competing priorities, and delays in surveys and titling, which slowed progress below targets.[49] Bureaucratic hurdles and elite capture further hampered efficiency, as noted in congressional reviews, preventing full completion despite reforms.[50] Section 30 of RA 9700 allowed ongoing resolution of pre-2009 cases, enabling land distribution to continue selectively after June 30, 2014, though new acquisitions ceased.[51] By the period's end, CARPER had advanced coverage for hundreds of thousands of farmers but underscored persistent gaps in achieving equitable redistribution.[52]

Intended Mechanisms and Operations

Distribution Targets and Coverage

The Comprehensive Agrarian Reform Program (CARP), established by Republic Act No. 6657 on June 10, 1988, set a national target of redistributing approximately 10.3 million hectares of agricultural land to qualified beneficiaries over an initial 10-year implementation period.[18][53] This scope encompassed both public and private lands, with distribution prioritized in phases to address immediate needs in staple crop areas while progressively covering broader agricultural holdings.[18] Covered lands included all alienable and disposable public domain areas devoted to or suitable for agriculture, irrespective of crops produced or location, as well as private agricultural lands exceeding owner retention limits of five hectares.[18] Private lands were subject to coverage regardless of tenurial status (e.g., tenanted or owner-operated) and commodity type, supplemented by government-foreclosed properties, idle or abandoned agricultural lands, and voluntary offers to sell.[18] Exclusions applied to non-agricultural classifications such as mineral lands, forests, residential, commercial, or industrial zones, ensuring focus on viable farming areas.[18] Phase One targeted rice and corn lands under prior decrees (e.g., Presidential Decree No. 27), idle lands, and voluntary offers within four years, while subsequent phases addressed larger private estates (over 50 hectares initially, then down to 24-hectare retention thresholds).[18] Eligible beneficiaries comprised landless farmers and regular farmworkers directly tilling the soil, with priority given to agricultural lessees and share tenants, followed by regular and seasonal farmworkers, other tillers, and qualified cooperatives or collectives.[18] Qualification required residency in the same barangay or municipality as the land, willingness and capacity to cultivate, and absence of prior land ownership beyond homestead limits.[18] Awards were limited to a maximum of three hectares per individual or family, distributable as contiguous tracts or multiple parcels, with provisions for collective ownership to promote viability on smaller or fragmented holdings.[18] This framework aimed to empower approximately 2.8 million potential recipients by transferring ownership while integrating support for production loans and services.[53]

Financing and Compensation

The Comprehensive Agrarian Reform Program (CARP) was financed through the Agrarian Reform Fund (ARF), initially established under Executive Order No. 229 and further detailed in Section 63 of Republic Act No. 6657 (1988). Funds were drawn from the national budget via continuing appropriations, proceeds from sales by the Asset Privatization Trust, receipts from the Presidential Commission on Good Government for recovered ill-gotten wealth, disposition of foreign country properties, official foreign grants and concessional financing, and other unappropriated government funds.[18] These sources supported land acquisition, distribution, and support services during the initial 10-year implementation period from 1988 to 1998. In 1998, Republic Act No. 8532 augmented funding by up to ₱50 billion from comparable sources, including asset sales and recovered assets, to extend CARP operations through 2008 and address implementation shortfalls.[54] [55] Compensation for acquired lands was administered by the Land Bank of the Philippines (LBP) in coordination with the Department of Agrarian Reform (DAR), adhering to the principle of just compensation under Section 18 of RA 6657. Valuation incorporated multiple factors per Section 17, including the land's acquisition cost, current fair market value as reflected in tax declarations, assessed value, net income from the property, the owner's sworn valuation, and broader social and economic benefits to the nation.[18] Landowners received a cash portion scaled by holding size—25% for estates over 50 hectares, 30% for 24–50 hectares, and 35% for 24 hectares or less—with the remainder paid via negotiable government financial instruments or LBP bonds bearing market-determined interest rates, redeemable in cash or applicable to taxes, loans, or further land acquisitions.[18] Alternative options included shares of stock in government-owned or controlled corporations or tax credits convertible to cash. Voluntary offers to sell earned an additional 5% cash incentive under Section 19.[18] The LBP advanced compensation payments, which the government amortized over time, while agrarian reform beneficiaries repaid the government in 30 equal annual installments at 6% interest, with provisions for government assumption of mortgages up to the compensation value.[56] Despite these mechanisms, payment processes frequently encountered delays due to valuation disputes and funding constraints, resulting in protracted litigation; for instance, in the Hacienda Luisita case, courts in 2025 ordered ₱28.49 billion in compensation plus interest for 6,453 hectares expropriated in 1989, highlighting systemic lags in finalizing claims.[57] Such delays stemmed from discrepancies between initial DAR-LBP valuations and judicial reviews, often requiring supplemental interest computations from the date of taking.[58]

Agrarian Reform Beneficiaries Development and Reform (ARBDR) Provisions

The Agrarian Reform Beneficiaries Development and Reform (ARBDR) provisions, primarily outlined in Republic Act No. 9700 (CARPER) enacted on August 7, 2009, emphasize integrated support services to enhance the productivity, organizational capacity, and economic viability of agrarian reform beneficiaries (ARBs). These provisions allocate at least 40% of annual agrarian reform appropriations to support services during the program's five-year extension, prioritizing credit facilities, infrastructure development, and technical assistance to transition ARBs from land recipients to sustainable farmers.[27] The Presidential Agrarian Reform Council (PARC) oversees implementation, ensuring services such as land titling, reduced-interest credit, and extension programs reach ARBs, with a focus on forming cooperatives for collective resource access.[27] Credit support constitutes 30% of support services funding, with one-third directed toward initial capitalization for new ARBs and two-thirds for ongoing needs of existing ones, administered through institutions like the Land Bank of the Philippines at concessional rates not exceeding 6% annually.[27] Training programs receive 5% of funds for seminars on farm management, technology adoption, and organizational skills, aiming to build ARB capacity for independent operations. Infrastructure initiatives include access roads, irrigation systems, post-harvest facilities, and marketing infrastructure, integrated with national development plans to link ARBs to markets.[27] Extension services promote technology transfer, including research on low-cost inputs like organic fertilizers, while the Department of Agrarian Reform (DAR) facilitates ARB organization and education to foster self-reliance.[27] Reform measures address gender equity, mandating equal access for rural women to credit, training, and participation in ARB organizations, with DAR required to establish a women's desk for grievance resolution and rights protection.[27] Provisions encourage subdivision of collective Certificates of Land Ownership Award (CLOAs) into individual titles to enhance tenure security and incentivize investment, though implementation has varied by region.[59] The Agrarian Reform Beneficiaries Development Sustainability Program (ARBDSP), administered by DAR's Bureau of Agrarian Reform Beneficiaries Development (BARBD), extends these efforts post-distribution, focusing on community viability through policy formulation, technical assistance, and empowerment initiatives for ARBs and their organizations.[60]
Key ARBDR Support Service Allocation (CARPER)Percentage of FundsPrimary Focus
Credit Facilities30%Concessional loans for capitalization and operations[27]
Training and Seminars5%Capacity building in management and technology[27]
Infrastructure and Extension ServicesRemaining balanceRoads, irrigation, market access, and tech transfer[27]
These provisions aim to mitigate post-distribution challenges like low productivity by linking land tenure to comprehensive development, though delivery has historically covered only about 44% of ARBs comprehensively.[61]

Empirical Impacts

Positive Outcomes and Achievements

The Comprehensive Agrarian Reform Program (CARP) achieved substantial land redistribution, transferring approximately 5.05 million hectares—equivalent to 16% of the Philippines' total land area—to around 2.6 million agrarian reform beneficiaries (ARBs) by 2014.[62] This included the distribution of about 2.5 million hectares of alienable and disposable public lands, alongside the issuance of stewardship rights under programs like the Integrated Social Forestry initiative.[63] These transfers formally ended tenancy arrangements for many farmers, converting them from sharecroppers or leaseholders to owners through Certificates of Land Ownership Awards (CLOAs), thereby reducing landlessness in targeted areas.[64] Empirical assessments indicate that CARP beneficiaries experienced higher real per capita incomes and lower poverty incidence compared to non-beneficiaries between 1990 and 2000, with land reform positively associated with rural poverty reduction through improved access to assets.[65] Micro-level studies attribute these gains to increased household investments in farming inputs and infrastructure, such as irrigation and farm-to-market roads facilitated by complementary support services.[66] For instance, one analysis estimated an average annual income uplift of approximately PHP 9,294 for a family of five among ARBs, linked to secure land tenure enabling credit access and crop diversification.[67] In select regions, such as former haciendas, beneficiaries reported enhanced living standards through collective organizations that provided marketing support and production assistance, leading to sustained agricultural output in coconut and rice sectors.[37] These outcomes were bolstered by ARB development programs, which delivered training and financial aid, contributing to localized reductions in rural poverty incidence and higher per capita expenditures among reformed households.[68] Overall, while aggregate productivity challenges persisted, CARP's tenure security mechanisms demonstrably empowered millions by formalizing property rights and fostering initial economic stability for smallholder farmers.[69]

Economic Shortcomings and Productivity Declines

The Comprehensive Agrarian Reform Program (CARP), implemented from 1988 onward, contributed to significant land fragmentation, reducing average farm sizes by approximately 30% between 1981 and 2002, which exacerbated inefficiencies in agricultural operations due to lost economies of scale and heightened transaction costs.[7] This fragmentation resulted in an average agrarian reform beneficiary (ARB) farm size of 1.2 hectares, often below viable economic thresholds for mechanization or diversification, leading to persistent underinvestment in inputs and technology.[9] Empirical analyses indicate that CARP-induced reallocations caused a 17% decline in aggregate agricultural productivity, primarily through misallocation of land to less efficient smallholders and distortions in occupational and technological choices, with data showing an 11.6% drop in output between 1989 and 1993.[7] Total factor productivity in Philippine agriculture grew at a meager 0.13% annually from 1980 to 1998, lagging far behind regional peers like Thailand (0.87%) and Indonesia (1.49%), with reformed areas exhibiting lower yields—such as sugar production 31% below non-ARB levels in 1994–1997 and coconut yields 40% under national averages post-2009.[9] Bank lending to agriculture contracted sharply, from 5.88% of total loans in 2001 to 2.49% in 2010, as tenure insecurities from collective Certificates of Land Ownership Awards (covering 70% of distributed lands) and Section 27 resale restrictions deterred formal credit access and drove reliance on informal markets with interest rates up to 60%.[9] These constraints amplified productivity losses, with estimates attributing up to PHP 340 billion in forgone farm output to CARP's effects in 2019 alone, underscoring a failure to translate land redistribution into sustained economic gains.[6] Despite distributing 5.05 million hectares by 2014, the program's economic outcomes included elevated poverty rates among ARBs (54% in 2009 versus 36% for all farmers), highlighting systemic inefficiencies in support mechanisms like credit and infrastructure.[9]

Poverty and Social Effects

The Comprehensive Agrarian Reform Program (CARP) was implemented with the explicit goal of alleviating rural poverty through land redistribution to tenant farmers and landless laborers, aiming to foster economic independence and social equity in agrarian communities.[70] Despite distributing approximately 5.05 million hectares to over 3 million beneficiaries by 2014, the program's impact on poverty reduction proved limited, as rural poverty incidence remained nearly unchanged at around 46.3% in 1988 and 47.0% by 2000, reflecting stagnation amid broader economic growth.[71][9] Among agrarian reform beneficiaries (ARBs), poverty rates showed only marginal improvement, declining from 47.6% in 1990 to 45.2% in 2000, while rising from 55.1% to 56.4% for non-beneficiaries during the same period, suggesting selective but insufficient relief. By the 2010s, poverty incidence in CARP-covered communities reached 54%, higher than the national rural average, as many ARBs grappled with unproductive smallholdings averaging 1-2 hectares, inadequate irrigation, and limited access to credit or markets, resulting in a persistent "landed poor" class reliant on subsistence farming.[9][72] Socially, CARP enhanced tenure security for some beneficiaries, correlating with modest increases in household investments in education, health, and physical assets, as well as greater participation in local governance structures.[37] However, these gains were offset by fragmentation of landholdings, which discouraged mechanization and scale efficiencies, exacerbating income volatility and prompting rural-to-urban migration among younger ARBs, with rural out-migration rates rising to 20-30% in reform areas by the early 2000s.[49] Empirical assessments link these outcomes to CARP's failure to integrate land transfer with productivity-enhancing supports, such as extension services or infrastructure, allowing underlying issues like population pressure on arable land and weak property enforcement to sustain social inequities.[70][72]

Controversies and Criticisms

Land Fragmentation and Inefficiency

The Comprehensive Agrarian Reform Program (CARP) led to extensive land fragmentation by subdividing estates into small holdings, with awards capped at 3 hectares per beneficiary under the 2009 CARPER extension, often resulting in parcels averaging 1.2 hectares.[9] This process reduced the national average farm size by 37 percent, as large-scale operations were dismantled to distribute land among multiple claimants, including heirs and tenants.[6] [73] By 2012, the typical farm had shrunk to 1.29 hectares, limiting the scope for efficient resource allocation.[74] Fragmentation diminished agricultural productivity through the erosion of economies of scale, as small plots hindered mechanization, irrigation infrastructure, and adoption of high-yield inputs that favor contiguous land.[9] Empirical assessments show a 17 percent drop in average output per hectare attributable to these dynamics, with total factor productivity in affected sectors stagnating or declining.[6] [73] For instance, coconut production among reform beneficiaries in agrarian reform communities underperformed national averages by 40 percent, while sugar yields lagged by 8 percent, reflecting constrained investment and reliance on low-yield subsistence methods.[9] CARP's prohibitions on unrestricted land sales and long-term leasing prevented market-driven consolidation, forcing inefficient underground transactions where 7 to 100 percent of beneficiaries reportedly mortgaged or sold holdings illegally due to uneconomic sizes.[9] Capital scarcity among smallholders exacerbated idleness, with only 17 percent of agrarian reform beneficiaries meeting amortization payments, leading to widespread defaults and an estimated P340 billion in forgone output in 2019.[6] [73] These constraints perpetuated a cycle of low technical efficiency, as fragmented operations prioritized risk aversion over scalable production, contributing to the Philippines' persistent underperformance in rice and other crop yields relative to regional benchmarks.[9]

Elite Capture and Corruption

The Comprehensive Agrarian Reform Program (CARP) in the Philippines has been undermined by elite capture, whereby influential landowners, politicians, and local power brokers manipulated implementation mechanisms to retain de facto control over redistributed lands or divert benefits away from intended tenant farmers. Political elites, often landowners themselves, lobbied for exemptions under provisions allowing voluntary offers to sell or stock distribution options, enabling large estates to evade compulsory acquisition; for instance, between 1988 and 2016, the Department of Agrarian Reform (DAR) approved conversion orders for 97,592 hectares of CARP-covered lands, frequently expedited through influence rather than merit-based evaluation.[24][75] This persistence of elite influence stems from entrenched patronage networks, where local officials prioritize alliances with powerful families over equitable distribution, resulting in incomplete coverage of targeted haciendas and perpetuation of land inequality.[76] Corruption within DAR and related agencies further facilitated elite capture, with documented irregularities in beneficiary selection and title issuance. A 2024 Commission on Audit (COA) report revealed that DAR awarded Certificates of Land Ownership Award (CLOAs) to unqualified individuals, including retired police officers and minors, in violation of CARP eligibility criteria requiring active tenant farmers; such misallocations allowed proxies or allies of elites to claim lands intended for the landless, undermining the program's redistributive intent.[77] Bribery and bureaucratic favoritism enabled illegal land conversions from agricultural to non-agricultural use, with DAR personnel reportedly processing expedited approvals for fees, as highlighted in governance assessments of rural development agencies.[75] Additionally, two former DAR secretaries were held liable by COA in 2017 for misusing P70 million in agrarian reform funds on unallowable expenses, such as unauthorized personnel allowances, reflecting systemic graft that diverts resources from support services for legitimate beneficiaries.[78] These practices have led to widespread issuance of fraudulent or irregularly obtained CLOAs, enabling elites to indirectly reclaim or control awarded lands through fictitious beneficiaries or post-distribution sales prohibited under CARP but enforced weakly. Independent analyses indicate that such corruption, compounded by elite resistance, has confined effective redistribution to smaller holdings while large estates remain concentrated, as evidenced by persistent land ownership inequality favoring politically connected families.[79][36] Despite anti-corruption measures like DAR's internal audits, the program's reliance on local implementation—vulnerable to capture by dynastic politicians—has sustained these issues, with reports estimating thousands of fake titles circulating in regions like Mindanao, further eroding trust in the reform's integrity.[80]

Conflicts with Property Rights and Market Incentives

The Comprehensive Agrarian Reform Program (CARP), implemented from 1988, authorized compulsory acquisition of agricultural lands exceeding a five-hectare retention limit per landowner, with compensation calculated based on factors including acquisition cost, assessed value, and productivity, often resulting in valuations disputed by owners as undervalued relative to market prices.[58][81] This state-mandated transfer without landowner consent has been critiqued as a violation of private property rights, fostering legal challenges, delays in implementation, and resistance from affected proprietors who viewed the process as coercive expropriation rather than fair eminent domain.[82] By enforcing retention caps and redistributing holdings into smaller parcels, CARP disrupted market-driven land allocation, fragmenting estates and eroding incentives for capital-intensive investments such as mechanization or soil improvement, as smallholder beneficiaries faced scale limitations and credit constraints.[7] Quantitative assessments reveal that the reform shrank average farm sizes by 34% and depressed agricultural productivity by 17% upon implementation, primarily through resource misallocation that favored equity over efficiency in land and labor use.[7][83] These dynamics compounded tenure uncertainties, where ongoing claims and restrictions on resale or leasing further diminished long-term investment motives, contrasting with voluntary market exchanges that align ownership with productive capabilities and yield signals for optimal resource deployment.[8] Post-CARP evaluations underscore how such interventions perpetuated a cycle of inefficiency, with redistributed lands yielding lower output per hectare compared to unreformed areas, highlighting the tension between redistributive mandates and incentive-compatible property regimes.[9][84]

Evaluations and Legacy

Key Studies and Data Assessments

A 2009 World Bank assessment of the Comprehensive Agrarian Reform Program (CARP), drawing on household surveys and village-level data from CARP beneficiary areas, concluded that the program generated modest poverty reductions among recipients, with beneficiary households experiencing average income increases of 10-15% relative to non-beneficiaries after controlling for location and endowments, though these gains were attenuated by incomplete land distribution and inadequate support services such as credit and infrastructure.[70] The analysis highlighted that CARP's impact on rural poverty was positive but smaller than anticipated, estimating a net reduction in rural poverty incidence by approximately 2-3 percentage points attributable to the program between 1988 and 2006, limited by factors including land fragmentation and elite capture of benefits.[85] Quantitative modeling by Adamopoulos and Restuccia (2020), utilizing micro-level farm data from the Philippine Census of Agriculture (1980-2012) and a structural framework calibrated to CARP's land ceilings and redistribution rules, estimated that the program reduced aggregate agricultural productivity by 16% through enforced farm size reductions below efficient scales, as smallholder plots under 2 hectares—prevalent post-CARP—exhibited yields 20-30% lower than larger operations due to fixed costs in mechanization and irrigation.[7] Their simulation indicated that relaxing land ceilings could have boosted productivity by up to 12%, underscoring causal links between fragmentation and output declines independent of tenure security effects.[8] The Philippine Institute for Development Studies (PIDS) 2018 review of CARP's 30-year implementation, based on administrative data showing 4.8 million hectares redistributed to 3 million beneficiaries by 2014, found mixed economic outcomes: while land access improved tenure security for 60% of recipients, farm productivity stagnated with rice yields in reformed areas averaging 3.5 tons per hectare versus 4.2 in non-reformed regions, attributed to insufficient extension services and market access.[63] A PIDS impact evaluation using CARP-IA household surveys (2002-2010) reported beneficiary poverty rates declining from 45% to 35% in targeted communities, yet persistent gaps in irrigation coverage (only 40% of awarded lands irrigated) and credit uptake (under 20% formal loans) constrained broader gains.[86] A 2020 PIDS study on parcelization of collective certificates of land ownership award (CLOAs), analyzing panel data from 1,200 households pre- and post-2014 reforms, demonstrated that subdividing collective holdings into individual titles increased household incomes by 18% and farm investments by 25%, suggesting that CARP's initial collective models exacerbated inefficiencies resolvable through targeted post-reform adjustments.[87] These findings align with FAO-documented challenges in impact assessment, where endogeneity in beneficiary selection and heterogeneous regional enforcement—e.g., only 70% compliance in Luzon sugar lands—complicate causal inference, necessitating mixed-methods approaches combining surveys with satellite yield data for robust evaluations.[88]

Debates on Policy Efficacy

Scholars and policymakers remain divided on the overall efficacy of the Comprehensive Agrarian Reform Program (CARP) in achieving its goals of poverty alleviation, equitable growth, and agricultural development. Proponents highlight modest gains in beneficiary incomes and localized poverty reductions, particularly in areas with complementary support services like infrastructure and credit access. For instance, agrarian reform beneficiaries (ARBs) experienced a 12.2% increase in real per capita income from 1990 to 2000, alongside a slight decline in poverty incidence from 47.6% to 45.2% over the same period, contrasting with rising poverty among non-ARBs. These outcomes were attributed to enhanced tenure security enabling investments in physical capital, though benefits were largely confined to organized Agrarian Reform Communities (ARCs) where irrigation and roads were improved. However, such assessments often emphasize that redistribution alone proved insufficient without sustained public investments, as isolated land transfers failed to generate scalable productivity gains.[37] Critics, drawing on econometric analyses, contend that CARP's structural flaws—such as enforced smallholder fragmentation and land market restrictions—caused net economic harm by distorting resource allocation and stifling efficiency. A quantitative study found that CARP reduced average farm sizes by 34% between 1981 and 2002, elevating the share of sub-one-hectare plots from 23% to 40%, which in turn lowered agricultural output per hectare by 17% through misallocation to less skilled operators and barriers to rental or sales that prevented consolidation. This inefficiency manifested in stagnant total factor productivity growth of just 0.13% annually from 1980 to 1998, lagging far behind regional peers like Thailand (0.87%) and Indonesia (1.49%), with sharp declines in key sectors such as coconut (40% below national yields) and sugar (8% below). Moreover, while CARP distributed over 5 million hectares by 2014, it inadvertently fostered a "landed poor" class, with 54% of ARC beneficiaries remaining below the poverty line in 2009—higher than the 36% rate for all farmers—exacerbated by credit suppression from ownership caps that drove informal lending at rates up to 60% per season.[8][9][9] The debate underscores a core tension: CARP's equity-focused redistribution enhanced short-term access for some 3 million beneficiaries but undermined long-term viability by prioritizing equal division over scale economies, with empirical evidence indicating limited poverty eradication and persistent rural underperformance. World Bank reviews of available data similarly note scant rigorous quantification of CARP's "opportunity-enhancing" effects on broader rural poverty, highlighting implementation gaps and the absence of transformative growth despite decades of effort. This has fueled calls to dismantle remaining restrictions, arguing that market-led adjustments could mitigate productivity losses to as low as 6% while preserving tenure gains.[89][8]

Post-2014 Developments and Alternatives

Following the expiration of the Comprehensive Agrarian Reform Program Extension with Reforms (CARPER) on June 30, 2014, the Department of Agrarian Reform (DAR) issued directives to continue land acquisition and distribution for parcels already covered by notices of coverage issued prior to the deadline, without requiring a new legislative extension. This administrative continuation allowed processing of approximately 304,412 hectares of remaining undistributed land identified as of 2014, though actual distribution lagged significantly thereafter. For instance, only 9,223 hectares were distributed in 2023, reflecting persistent delays attributed to legal disputes, landowner resistance, and administrative bottlenecks. Under the Duterte administration (2016–2022), efforts focused on accelerating completion of pending distributions and enhancing support services such as credit access and infrastructure, yet progress remained slow, with agrarian reform described as "unfinished business" due to unresolved claims and limited improvements in rural productivity. The Marcos Jr. administration (2022–present) has maintained momentum through initiatives like the Gawad Agraryo awards in September 2025, where President Ferdinand Marcos Jr. highlighted beneficiaries as "models of hope," while DAR's 2026 budget proposals emphasize ongoing land titling and soil health schemes amid a reduced allocation from ₱28 billion to ₱17 billion. However, ongoing land settlement has constrained shifts toward broader rural development, including infrastructure and market access, as resources remain tied to redistribution targets. Proposals for alternatives to CARP's compulsory acquisition model have gained traction, advocating market-assisted land reform (MASL) involving voluntary transfers subsidized by government, as explored in analyses favoring willing-buyer-willing-seller mechanisms over mandatory redistribution to mitigate evasion and inefficiency. Economists like Victoria Fabella have argued for phasing out CARP entirely post-2014, redirecting efforts to secure property rights, provide extension services, and enable farm consolidation to counteract fragmentation-induced productivity losses documented in studies showing CARP's role in reducing agricultural output by limiting scale economies. Recent market-oriented initiatives, such as the Support to Parcelization of Land for Individual Titling (SPLIT) proposal backed by the World Bank, aim to subdivide collective titles into individual holdings to facilitate leasing and sales, though critics contend this undermines farmer cooperatives and risks elite recapture without addressing causal drivers of inequality like weak enforcement. Empirical assessments indicate MASL variants have yielded mixed results globally and in Philippine pilots, often favoring wealthier participants over landless tenants due to information asymmetries and bargaining power disparities.

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