in New Guinea, S. sinensis in southern China and Taiwan, and S. barberi'' in India; dotted arrows represent Austronesian introductions Sugarcane was traditionally used in the pre-colonial Philippines for making various native
jaggery products (collectively called
panutsa, like
pakombuk,
sangkaka and
bagkat bao) used in cooking. It was also widely used to make traditional wines like
palek,
byais,
basi,
intus, and
pangasi. Sugarcane juice is also fermented into traditional
cane vinegars in the Philippines (variously called
sukang basi,
sukang maasim, or
sukang iloko). Traditional cane vinegar is associated with sugarcane wine-making.
Sugarcane farming became an industry after 1856 when
Nicholas Loney, a British
Vice-Consul, was sent to
Iloilo City and convinced the American house of
Russell & Sturgis to open a branch in Iloilo for the purpose of giving crop loans to sugar planters. Loney through his firm, Loney and Kee Company, facilitated the fast development of sugar industry by importing sugar cuttings from
Sumatra and machinery from
England and
Scotland to Iloilo, which the sugar planters can buy on easy
installment loans. After the Second World War the
Sugar Quota Administration (SQA) replaced PSA in 1951 vis-à-vis with Philippine Sugar Institute (PHILSUGIN), a research agency. During the 1950s and 1960s, more than 20 percent of Philippine exports came from the sugar industry. It declined in the 1970s and plunged further in the first half of the 1980s to roughly 7 percent. It was during this period that the government acknowledged the existence of crisis in the industry. One of the factors that contributed to the worsening situation of the industry during that time was the depressed market for sugar. In 1976, in response to precipitous declines in sugar prices, President Marcos issued Presidential Decree No. 3888 (and amended by Presidential Decree Nos. 775 and 1192), ordering the establishment of the
Philippine Sugar Commission (PHILSUCOM). This commission assumed the functions of both SQA and PHILSUGIN, and was given the sole power to buy and sell sugar, set prices paid to planters and millers, and purchase companies connected to the sugar industry. In May 1978, the Republic Planters Bank was established to provide adequate and timely financing to the sugar industry. To minimize the impact of fluctuating world sugar prices during this period, PHILSUCOM established a protective pricing policy, entering into four-year term contracts. These contracts assured that 50 percent of exported sugar would be sold at an average price of 23.5 U.S. cents per pound, an amount lesser than the prevailing world rate of 30 U.S. cents per pound. This was followed by the government's monopolization of the sugar industry. Contrary to projections, government substitution in the market did not improve the industry. PHILSUCOM and its trading subsidiary, the
National Sugar Trading Corporation (NASUTRA), were tainted with controversies. According to the findings of a study conducted by a group of economists at the University of the Philippines (U.P.), sugar producers' losses reached an estimated value between 11 and 14 billion Philippine pesos during the period between 1974 and 1983.
Negros famine Establishment of Sugar Regulatory Administration (SRA) After the 1986 Revolution, which ousted Marcos, President
Corazon Aquino immediately appointed Fred J. Elizalde as officer-in-charge of the institutions that will regulate the sugar industry since the administration that time was technically in revolutionary form of government. On May 28, 1986, Executive Order No. 18 established the current
Sugar Regulatory Administration (SRA). The SRA was mandated to carry out the following functions: to institute an orderly system in sugarcane production for the stable, sufficient and balanced production of sugar; to establish and maintain a balanced relation between production and requirement of sugar, and marketing conditions as will stabilize prices; to promote the effective merchandising of sugar and its products; to undertake studies to the formulate policies. ==Sugar industry and the Philippine economy==