PROGRAM
Overview
Working Areas
Beneficiaries
Community Education
Vocational Training
Social Welfare and Child Rights
Income Generation
WarlPich Community Enterprise
Institutional Development

Income Generation: Improving food security and alternate source of income...
Youths, adults and in particularly women from disadvantaged family backgrounds are enabled to increase food security through the application of knowledge on technical agriculture training, and the promotion of micro financial services for employment and income generation in the communities.

The Program provides agricultural and other village economy-related technical training to adults above 18 years (most of them are women) to improve food security to vulnerable households in a first step and generate additional income in a second step. The farming organic system is introduced to improve natural and economical environment of the communities. The model farmers are promoted to ensure sustainability of the qualified human resources in the communities.

The Program also supports management training and seed-capital to Social Welfare Fund Committee (SWFC) for the establishment of a community-owned financial service system, facilitating household-based savings and offering credit for income-generating purposes. To help focus group, "Fund for Social Welfare" promotion among disadvantaged families, especially women is set up. Loans from these funds enable such families to join a Development Activity Group (DAG) that runs community-owned income-generating activities under the authority of Community owned SWFC. The SWFC manages and allocates credit from social welfare funds to individuals or groups as loans for generating income. To qualify for a loan people must undergo skills training and business plan. The interest from social welfare fund loans is used for social welfare of the community, especially for children in difficult circumstances. The farmer associations are established in the communities for the local economic development.

The program also provides money to help community build rice bank. These enable families to borrow rice during time of food shortage and avoid the high interest rates charged by private lenders. Training in bookkeeping is provided to support this activity.

Furthermore, the Program facilitates the leasing out of workshops at its district-based Development Service Centers (DSC) to craftsmen / women who have graduated from Wathnakpheap training courses and who wish to establish themselves as entrepreneurs and run a private workshop. These private workshops and DSCs impart training to applicants proposed by Wathnakpheap in the same way workshop owners in the market offer such opportunities to the Program.

As the result, for the year of 2004:
  • 97% of 503 families in difficulty circumstance (FDCs) have applied for least 3 types of agriculture training for increasing and diversifying agriculture production.


  • 279 cash saving groups (35 groups newly added in 2004) with members (66% FDCs) have accumulate the saving amount of 65 million riels (USD16,250) and taken the amount of 48 million riels as loans to 1,150 members with monthly interest rate 2% to 3%.


  • 98 community rice banks (22 groups newly added in 2004) with 1,296 members (67% FDCs) could save stock of 61.8 tones of rice and taken 47.6 tones of rice as loans to 607 members during food shortage.


  • 1,892 FDCs have taken loans from SWCs of 101 villages the amount of 187,2 million riels (USD 46,800) for generating incomes. The individual yearly income average was between 100,000 riels to 2,850,000 riels.


  • 460 FDCs have increased food security above 9 months, resulting from the above alternatives source of incomes.


  • Capacity building to self-help groups:


  Group Members Capacity building on
Model Farmer   105 TOT/Extension trainers
Cash saving leader 279 837 Bookkeeping/ loan management
Rice bank leaders 98 294 Bookkeeping/ loan management
Social welfare committee leaders 101 303 Bookkeeping/ loan management

Income Generation

Less cost and high productivity
of SRI

Additional income from home
gardening after consumption

learning on animal raising

Access loan from SWC for generating incomes

Food Processing for selling
Lessons Learnt 2004
  • Each FDC at least apply 3 times to agriculture knowledge increasing training for improving food security.
  • Cash saving groups and rice banks help FDC to solve their emergency needs and food shortage.
  • Each village fund works that works well can be allocated three instalments:
    . 1st instalment: USD 350
    . 2nd instalment: USD 250, if the previous loans are well managed.
    . 3rd instalment: USD 200, this means loans for generating income is successful in the village.
  • Alternative sources of income help FDC to improve food security and result in sending heir children to school, to apply hygiene and health care instruction.