7 ideas to improve Papua New Guinea
By JOHN FOWKE 1. Our agriculturalists are cash-poor subsistence farmers, and their land-entitlements are held under customary clan-authorised usufructuary understandings. The daily life of subsistence-dependant families is dictated by needs both physical and in regard to social obligations. A trading, budgeting, calculating sort of life it is not; and since the cessation of the need for constant preparedness for war, mens’ part in it has lacked imperatives and become accepting of a role where a taste for leisure may be indulged. All these facts militate against any inclination for a typical rural clansman to set up a commercial farming enterprise. And yet, although modified in recent times our extension methods tend to focus upon technology and business-mindedness. Instead of creating sad and silly monstrosities like the morbid and bad-debt-ridden 20-hectare coffee scheme and the smallholder cattle schemes of twenty years ago. I believe we should encourage the production of cash