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Release Date :
Reference Number :
2018-323

Animal production industry leads the sector in terms of number of establishments

The preliminary results of the 2016 Annual Survey of Philippine Business and Industry (ASPBI) reported that there were 1,129 establishments with total employment (TE) of 20 and over in the formal sector and engaged in Agriculture, Forestry and Fishing activities.

Among the industries, animal production led the sector with 374 establishments, accounting for 33.1 percent of the total. Growing of non-perennial crops and growing of perennial crops followed with 303 (26.8%) and 192 (17.0%) establishments, respectively.

The remaining 23.1 percent (260 establishments) were engaged in the following:

• Fishing, 115 establishments (10.2%) 
• Support activities to agriculture and post-harvest crop activities, 91 establishments (8.1%) 
•  Aquaculture, 47 establishments (4.2%) 
• Silviculture and other forestry activities and support services to forestry, 7 establishments (0.6%)

Figure 1 reflects the percentage distribution of Agriculture, Forestry and Fishing establishments with TE of 20 and over by industry group in 2016.

 

At the regional level, Negros Island Region registered the highest number of establishments with 272 or 24.1 percent of the total. Davao Region followed with 156 establishments (13.8%).

The following were the regions with more than a hundred number of Agriculture, Forestry and Fishing establishments with TE of 20 and over in 2016:

• Central Luzon, 148 establishments (13.1%) 
• Northern Mindanao, 133 establishments (11.8%) 
• CALABARZON, 110 establishments (9.7%)

Figure 2 shows the top 10 regions in terms of number of Agriculture, Forestry and Fishing establishments with TE of 20 and over in 2016.

 

Growing of perennial crops industry generates the highest employment in 2016

Total employment generated by Agriculture, Forestry and Fishing establishments with TE of 20 and over reached 144,087 in 2016. Of the total work force, 142,973 workers or 99.2 percent were paid employees while the remaining 0.8 percent were working owners and unpaid workers.

Among industry groups, growing of perennial crops employed the most number of workers with 62,362 or 43.3 percent of the total. This was followed by growing of non-perennial crops and animal production with 33,339 workers (23.1%) and 20,635 workers (14.3%), respectively.

Figure 3 shows the distribution of employment for Agriculture, Forestry and Fishing establishments with TE of 20 and over by industry group in 2016.

 

At the regional level, Davao Region which ranked second in terms of number of establishments in 2016, employed the most number of workers with 38,855 or 27.0 percent of the total. Negros Island Region followed with 28,599 workers (19.8%). Northern Mindanao came third with 18,984 workers (13.2%).

The average number of workers per establishment for the sector was recorded at 128. Among industries, growing of perennial crops posted the highest average with 325 workers per establishment followed by fishing activities with 120 workers.

Growing of perennial crops industry pays the highest average annual compensation

Total compensation paid by the sector to its employees in 2016 amounted to PHP25.0 billion which translates to an average annual compensation of PHP174,547 per employee.

Among industries, growing of perennial crops earned the highest compensation amounting to PHP14.0 billion or more than half (55.9%) of the total. Growing of non-perennial crops followed with PHP2.9 billion (11.7%). Support activities to agriculture and post harvest crop activities placed third with PHP2.8 billion (11.3%).

Meanwhile, support activities to agriculture and post-harvest crop activities paid the highest  average annual compensation ofPHP295,512 per employee. Other industries that paid an average annual compensation of more than a hundred thousand were:

• Growing of perennial crops, PHP224,312 per employee 
• Aquaculture, PHP163,254 per employee 
• Fishing, PHP146,091 per employee 
• Animal production, PHP129,335 per employee 
• Silviculture and other forestry activities and support services to forestry, PHP119,841 per employee

Figure 4 shows the average annual compensation of employees for Agriculture, Forestry and Fishing establishments with total employment of 20 and over by industry group in 2016.

 

Across regions, the National Capital Region (NCR) paid the highest average annual compensation of PHP300,398 per employee. Caraga and Davao Region followed with average annual compensation of PHP280,424 and PHP223,405 per employee, respectively. On the other hand, Negros Island Region paid the lowest average annual compensation of PHP67,356 per employee in 2016.

Growing of perennial crops industry generates almost half of the total value of output

Total value of output generated by Agriculture, Forestry and Fishing establishments with TE of 20 and over reached PHP129.8 billion in 2016.

By industry group, the highest value of output was generated by growing of perennial crops worth PHP57.6 billion or 44.4 percent of the total, followed by animal production with PHP37.4 billion (28.8%). Growing of non-perennial crops ranked third with PHP13.5 billion (10.4%).

Figure 5 illustrates the percentage distribution of value of output for Agriculture, Forestry and Fishing establishments with total employment of 20 and over by industry group in 2016.

 

The top three regions in terms of value of output in 2016 were all located in Mindanao with a combined value of output of 60.2 percent of the total. Davao Region generated the highest value of output worth PHP33.7 billion or 26.0 percent, followed by Northern Mindanao and SOCCSKSARGEN with respective shares of 19.8 percent (PHP25.7 billion) and 14.4 percent (PHP18.7 billion).

Growing of perennial crops industry incurs the highest expense

Total expense, including compensation, for Agriculture, Forestry and Fishing establishments with TE of 20 and over amounted to PHP124.4 billion.

Industry-wise, growing of perennial crops incurred the highest expense amounting to PHP54.0 billion or 43.4 percent. Animal production ranked second with PHP35.1 billion (28.2%), followed by fishing activities with PHP10.9 billion (8.7%).

The top three regions in terms of value of output were also the top regions in terms of value of expense, with combined shares of 58.4 percent of the total. Davao Region expended PHP31.4 billion (25.2%), Northern Mindanao with PHP22.8 billion (18.4%) and SOCCSKSARGEN with PHP18.4 billion (14.8%).

Income per expense ratio stands at 1.06

The sector generated an income per expense ratio of 1.06 in 2016. This means that for every peso spent, a corresponding income of PHP1.06 was generated.

Among industries, growing of non-perennial crops recorded the highest income per expense ratio of 1.26 while support activities to agriculture and post-harvest crop activities posted the lowest income per expense ratio of 0.65.

The income per expense ratio of five other major industry groups were as follows:

• Silviculture and other forestry activities and support services to forestry, 1.23 
• Growing of perennial crops, 1.08 
• Animal production, 1.08 
• Fishing, 1.06 
• Aquaculture, 1.04

Growing of perennial crops industry generates the highest value added

Total value added produced by establishments with TE of 20 and over in 2016 was estimated at PHP40.4 billion.

Among industries, growing of perennial crops generated the highest value added with PHP21.1 billion, accounting for 52.3 percent or more than half of the total value added. This was followed by animal production and growing of non-perennial crops with respective value added of PHP6.9 billion (17.0%) and PHP6.2 billion (15.4%).

At the regional level, Davao Region recorded the highest share to total value added with PHP12.2 billion or 30.3 percent of the total. This was followed by Northern Mindanao with PHP8.3 billion (20.5 percent) and SOCCSKSARGEN with PHP5.7 billion (14.2 percent).

Aquaculture industry posts the highest productivity

The ratio of value added to employment, a measure of labor productivity, was recorded at PHP280,362 per worker in 2016.

Aquaculture activities generated a labor productivity of PHP343,550 per worker, the highest among industries. Growing of perennial crops ranked second with PHP338,560 per worker while animal production recorded PHP332,172 per worker.

Figure 6 presents the labor productivity for Agriculture, Forestry and Fishing establishments with total employment of 20 and over by industry group in 2016.

 

At the regional level, Central Luzon was the most labor productive in 2016, registering a labor productivity of PHP563,529. This was followed by Northern Mindanao and SOCCSKSARGEN with respective labor productivity of PHP435,248 and PHP421,858 per worker.

Gross addition to tangible fixed assets reaches PHP7.3 billion

Gross addition to tangible fixed assets acquired by Agriculture, Forestry and Fishing establishments was valued at PHP7.3 billion in 2016.

Among industries, animal production contributed the highest gross addition to tangible fixed assets at PHP3.6 billion or 49.0 percent of the total. This was followed by growing of perennial crops with PHP2.0 billion or 27.3 percent worth of gross addition to fixed assets.

Across the country, SOCCSKSARGEN led all regions in terms of gross addition to tangible fixed assets estimated at PHP3.1 billion or 42.1 percent share to total. This was followed by Davao Region and Northern Mindanao with PHP1.6 billion (21.6%) and PHP925 million (12.7%) share to total, respectively.

Total subsidies amounts to PHP2.0 billion in 2016

Subsidies granted by the government to support the business operation of Agriculture, Forestry and Fishing establishments with TE of 20 and over in 2016 amounted to PHP2.0 billion.

Out of the eight major industry groupings for the sector, only three were recipients of subsidies in 2016. These were support activities to agriculture and post-harvest crop activities with PHP1.9 billion (96.6%), fishing activities with PHP63.6 million (3.2%) and growing of perennial crops with PHP4.6 million (0.2%).

 

 

 

 

For the OIC-DEPUTY NATIONAL STATISTICIAN:

 

 

(Sgd.) DIVINA GRACIA L. DEL PRADO 
(Director III) 
Economic Sector Statistics Service 
Officer-in-charge

 

 

 

 

 


TECHNICAL NOTES

Introduction

This Special Release presents the preliminary results of the 2016 Annual Survey of Philippine Business and Industry (ASPBI) for the Agriculture, Forestry and Fishing sector for establishments with total employment of 20 and over.

The 2016 ASPBI is one of the designated statistical activities of the Philippine Statistics Authority (PSA). Data collected from the survey provide information on the levels, structure, performance, and trends of economic activities of the formal sector in the entire country for the year 2016.

The survey was conducted nationwide in 2017 with the year 2016 as the reference period of data, except for employment which is as of November 15, 2016. 

Establishment Data Management System (EDMS) was still utilized in the decentralized processing of 2016 ASPBI questionnaires in the province as well as the online accomplishment of questionnaire through the PSA website.

Data are presented at the national and industry group or 3-digit 2009 Philippine Standard Industrial Classification (PSIC) and at the regional level.

Legal Authority

The conduct of the 2016 ASPBI is authorized under Republic Act No. 10625 known as the Philippine Statistical Act of 2013 - Reorganizing and strengthening of the Philippine Statistical System (PSS), its agencies and instrumentalities.

Scope and Coverage

The 2016 ASPBI covered establishments engaged in 18 economic sectors classified under the 2009 PSIC, namely:

  • Agriculture, Forestry, and Fishing (A)
  • Mining and Quarrying (B)
  • Manufacturing (C)
  • Electricity, Gas, Steam, and Air Conditioning Supply (D)
  • Water Supply; Sewerage, Waste Management and Remediation Activities (E)
  • Construction (F)
  • Wholesale and Retail Trade; Repair of Motor Vehicles and Motorcycles (G)
  • Transportation and Storage (H)
  • Accommodation and Food Service Activities (I)
  • Information and Communication (J)
  • Financial and Insurance Activities (K)
  • Real Estate Activities (L)
  • Professional, Scientific and Technical Activities (M)
  • Administrative and Support Service Activities (N)
  • Education (P)
  • Human Health and Social Work Activities (Q)
  • Arts, Entertainment, and Recreation (R)
  • Other Service Activities (S)

The following sections of the 2009 PSIC are excluded from the scope of this survey and all other establishment-based surveys of PSA:

  • Public Administration and Defense; Compulsory Social Security (Section O)
  • Activities of Households as Employers; Undifferentiated Goods and Services Producing Activities of Households for Own Use (Section T)
  • Activities of Extra-territorial Organization and Bodies (Section U)

The survey was confined to the formal sector of the economy, which consists of the following:

  • Corporations and partnership
  • Cooperatives and foundations
  • Single proprietorship with employment of 10 and over
  • Single proprietorships with branches

Hence, the 2016 ASPBI covered only the following economic units:

  • All establishments with total employment of 10 and over; and
  • All establishments with total employment of less than 10, except those with Legal Organization = 1 (Single proprietorship) and Economic Organization = 1 (Single establishments), that are engaged in economic activities described according to the 2009 PSIC.

Frame of Establishments

The frame for the 2016 ASPBI was extracted from the 2016 List of Establishments (LE). The estimated number of establishments in operation in the country in 2016 totaled to 902,213. About 294,494 establishments (32.6% of the total establishments) belong to the formal sector of which 255,403 (86.7%) comprised the establishment frame. This frame was used to draw the sample establishments for the survey.

Unit of Enumeration

The unit of enumeration for the 2016 ASPBI is the establishment. An establishment is defined as an economic unit under a single ownership or control which engages in one or predominantly one kind of activity at a single fixed location.

Classification of Establishments

An establishment is categorized by its economic organization, legal organization, industrial classification, employment size, and geographic location.

Economic Organization refers to the organizational structure or role of the establishment in the organization.  An establishment may be single establishment, branch, establishment and main office with branches elsewhere, main office only, and ancillary unit other than main office.

Legal Organization refers to the legal form of the economic entity which owns the establishment. An establishment may be single proprietorship, partnership, government corporation, stock corporation, non-stock corporation, and cooperative.

Industrial classification of an economic unit was determined by the activity from which it derives its major income or revenue.  The 2009 PSIC was utilized to classify economic units according to their economic activities.

Size of an establishment is determined by its total employment (TE) as of a specific date.  Total employment (TE) refers to the total number of persons who work in or for the establishment.

This includes paid employees, working owners, unpaid workers and all employees who work full-time or part-time including seasonal workers.

Included also are persons on short term leave such as those on sick, vacation or annual leaves and on strike.

Geographic Classification refers to the classification by geographic area using the Philippine Standard Geographic Code (PSGC) classification. The PSGC contains the latest updates on the official number of regions, provinces, cities, municipalities, and barangays in the Philippines. The PSGC as of December 31, 2016 was used for the 2016 ASPBI.

Methodology

Sampling Design

The 2016 ASPBI used stratified systematic sampling with 3-digit or 5-digit PSIC serving as first stratification variable and TE as the second stratification variable.

For establishments with TE 20 and over, the 18 administrative regions served as the geographic domains while the 5-digit level of the 2009 PSIC served as the industry domains.

Estimation Procedure for Establishments with TE of 20 and over

a. Non-Certainty Stratum (strata of TE 20 to 49 and TE 50 to 99)

Sections A, C, E, F, G, H, I, K, L, M, N, P, Q, R and S

The estimate of the total of a characteristic for the non-certainty employment strata in an industry domain in each region,

where:

s       = denotes the non-certainty employment strata in TE of 20 to 49 and TE 50 to 99 
p       = 1, 2,..., 18  regions (geographic domains) 
xspj   = value of the jth establishment in the non-certainty employment strata in TE of 20 to 49 and TE 50 to 99 for an industry domain in each region 
j        = 1, 2, 3,…, nsp establishments 
Wspj = weight of the jth establishment in the non-certainty employment strata with TE 20 to 49 and TE 50 to 99 for an industry domain in each region

Nsp  = total number of establishments in the non-certainty employment strata in TE of 20 to 49 and TE 50 to 99 for an industry domain in each region 
nsp  = number of sample establishments in the non-certainty employment strata in TE of 20 to 49 and TE of 50 to 99 for an industry domain in each region

 

b. Certainty Stratum (Establishments under the following: Section B, D and J, ICT core industries, BPM industries, GOCCs and with TE 100 and over)

The total of a characteristic for the certainty employment stratum in an industry domain in each region was

where:

c        = denotes the certainty employment strata in TE of 20 and over 
p        = 1, 2,..., 18 regions (geographic domains) 
xcpj   =  value of the jth establishment in the certainty employment strata in TE of 20 and over in an industry domain within each region 
j         = 1, 2, 3, …, mcp establishments 
mcp  = number of establishments in the certainty employment strata in TE of 20 and over in an industry domain within each region

 

c. Total Estimate for TE of 20 and Over

The estimate of the total of a characteristic for the industry domain in each region (geographic domain) was obtained by aggregating the estimates for all employment strata (non-certainty and certainty) in the same industry domain,

where   dp  denotes the industry domains in each region.

National level estimates of the characteristics by industry domain were obtained by aggregating separately the estimates for the particular industry domain from all the regions

Weight Adjustment Factor for Non-Response

To account for non-response in the non-certainty strata, the adjustment factor (n/n’) was multiplied with the sampling weight (W) of each of the sampling unit. The sampling weight, defined as N/n, was recomputed as

Thus, the adjusted weight (W’spj) for the non-certainty employment stratum for the industry domain with TE 20-99 was

where:

Nsp  =  total number of establishments in the non-certainty employment stratum with TE 20-99 for the industry domain within each geographic domain (region) 
n’sp  = number of responding establishments in the non-certainty employment stratum with TE 20-99 for the industry domain within each geographic domain (region)

Response Rate

Response rate for Agriculture, Forestry and Fishing Sector for establishments with TE of 20 and over was 94.3 percent (665 out of 705 establishments). This included receipts of "good" questionnaires, partially accomplished questionnaires, reports of closed, moved out or out of scope establishments. 

Of the total responses, 18 establishments responded online

Reports of the remaining non-reporting establishments were imputed based on established imputation methods and from other available administrative data sources and financial statements from Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC). However, reports of establishments which were found to be duplicates and out of business in 2016, were not imputed.

Limitation of Data

The 2016 ASPBI covered only the formal sector of the economy.

Concepts and Definitions of Terms

Economic activity is the establishment’s source of income. If the establishment is engaged in several activities, its main economic activity is that which earns the biggest income or revenue.

Total employment is the number of persons who worked in for the establishment as of November 15, 2016.

Paid employees are all persons working in the establishment and receiving pay, as well as those working away from the establishment paid by and under the control of the establishment. Included are all employees on sick leave, paid vacation or holiday. Excluded are consultants, home workers, receiving pure commissions only, and workers on indefinite leave.

Compensation is the sum of salaries and wages, separation/retirement/terminal pay, gratuities, and payments made by the employer in behalf of the employees such as contribution to SSS/GSIS, ECC, PhilHealth, Pag-ibig, etc.

Salaries and wages are payments in cash or in kind to all employees, prior to deductions for employee’s contributions to SSS/GSIS, withholding tax, etc. Included are total basic pay, overtime pay and other benefits.

Income or Revenue refers to cash received and receivables for goods/products and by-products sold and services rendered.

E-commerce refers to the selling of products or services over electronic systems such as Internet Protocol-based networks and other computer networks. Electronic Data Interchange (EDI) network, or other on-line system. Excluded are orders received from telephone, facsimile and e-mails.

Expense refers to cost incurred in an enterprise effort to generate revenue, representing the cost of doing business.  This is treated on a consumed basis. It excludes cost incurred in the acquisition of income generating assets.

Intermediate expense are expenditures incurred in the production of goods such as materials and supplies used, fuels, lubricants, oils and greases used; electricity and water purchased, agricultural/forestry/fishery  and industrial services done by others.

Value added is gross output less intermediate input. Gross output for the agriculture, forestry and fishing sector is value of output non-industrial services done for others (except rent income from land). Intermediate input is intermediate expenses plus non-industrial services done by others (except rent expense for land) and all other expenses.

Value of output represents the sum of the receipts from products and by-products sold, agricultural/forestry/fishery services rendered, industrial services, and goods sold in the same condition as purchased  less the cost of goods sold; and  value of fixed assets produced on own account and change in inventories of finished products and work-in-progress.

Gross addition to tangible fixed assets is equal to capital expenditures less sale of fixed assets, including land.

Change in inventories is equivalent to the value of inventories at the end of the year less the value of inventories at the beginning of the year.

Inventories refer to the stock of goods owned by and under the control of the establishment as of a fixed date, regardless of where the stocks are located. Valuation is at current replacement cost in purchaser prices. Replacement cost is the cost of an item in terms of its present price rather than its original cost.

Subsidies are all special grants in the form of financial assistance or tax exemption or tax privilege given by the government to aid and develop an industry.

See more at the Annual Survey of Philippine Business and Industry Main Page.

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