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Abstract
Ensuring food security is not merely an economic or
humanitarian activity: it also actively contributes to
national and global socio-political stability. During the
last 25 years of implementing its Renovation Policy,
Vietnam has achieved national food security, actively
contributing to the goals of eliminating hunger, alleviating
poverty, and ensuring regional and global food security.
Vietnam is changing from a net food importer to an
exporter of many agricultural commodities. However,
Vietnam is an agriculture-based economy with more
than 70% of its population engaged in agriculture. A very high proportion
of many of the commodities it produces are exported: 25% of its rice
production, 90% of coffee, rubber, cashew nut and cassava, and 95% of
black pepper. Any fluctuation on the international market can adversely
affect its agricultural industries. Difficulties and challenges will face the
country in the years to come: rapid population growth; decreasing farm
areas and water resources; natural disasters, floods, droughts; decreasing
levels of investment in agricultural production; barriers to agricultural
international trade; low incomes of the poor, reducing their access to food;
food demand increasing for other purposes, including the production of
bio-energy; and climate change. Vietnam’s agriculture restructuring policy
aims at higher competitiveness and ensuring food security in the context of
climate change. Efforts are focused on policies to stabilise the area of land
devoted to rice cultivation; increasing investment in water management
infrastructure; and promotion of mechanisation in rice production and
processing. It will apply scientific and technological advances to varietal
improvement; natural resource management; pest and disease control; and
post-harvest technologies. It will also re-organise the institutional set up for
agricultural production, linking production with processing and marketing.
This will raise the incomes of rice growers, modernise rural life and enhance
farmers’ livelihoods. At the same time, it will actively seek to mitigate the
impacts of climate change, especially of rising sea levels. With sound policies
to guarantee its national food security, Vietnam is ready to cooperate with
its neighbours, share its experiences in agricultural development with the
international community; and actively contribute to ensuring food security
globally. Halving the proportion of people suffering from hunger by 2015 is
one of the eight Millennium Development Goals agreed to by many nations
more than a decade ago. With many difficulties and challenges still facing
food security, achieving this goal will require the effort of every nation,
and especially active support from developed countries and international
organisations. This demands coordinated action at regional levels as well
as on a global scale