By Arifah Sharifuddin, Institute Director, Tech for Good Institute (TFGI)
At a glance
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Malaysia’s 13th Malaysia Plan food security goals depend on scaling digital agriculture, but smallholders remain constrained by financing and risk barriers.
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Digital Agriculture Technologies can boost yields and cut costs, yet rigid lending terms and climate-related risks limit adoption.
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Three solutions are proposed: data-driven credit scoring, supply chain–linked repayments, and localised support hubs to build confidence and resilience.
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The Thirteenth Malaysia Plan (13MP, 2026-2030) sets ambitious national food security goals, aiming to boost domestic production and increase the agri-food sector’s value-added contribution to RM58 billion by 2030. Achieving this pivot requires a fundamental modernisation—a shift from traditional farming to digital agriculture.
Crucially, the success of this transition hinges not on the technology itself, but on resolving the misalignment in available financing mechanisms and risks smallholders face t. This disconnect prevents smallholders—the backbone of local food production—from adopting proven, high-yield solutions. Resolving this financial challenge is the critical step toward national resilience and fulfilling the 13MP’s mandate.
Digital Resilience for a Volatile Future
Malaysia’s commitment to food security is a strategic imperative driven by climate volatility, global supply chain shocks, and an urgent need to uplift rural incomes. The focus is on adopting Digital Agriculture Technologies (DAT) to stabilise local production and increase Self-Sufficiency Ratios (SSRs).
Regional Alignment: A Blueprint for ASEAN
- Malaysia’s challenge is echoed across Southeast Asia, where 100 million smallholder farmers face similar constraints in adopting digital tools due to cost barriers and trust gaps. ASEAN leaders have recognised this, adopting the ASEAN Leaders’ Declaration on Strengthening Food Security and Nutrition in Response to Crises (2023) to accelerate digital transformation and increase the resilience of the regional agriculture and food system.
- Malaysia’s success in developing innovative financing models for smallholder farmers is therefore not just a national win, but a blueprint for fulfilling ASEAN’s regional agenda for digital inclusivity and traceability. Mitigating financial risk for its smallholders directly contributes to Malaysia’s regional stability and supply chain integrity.
Technology Performance: Reducing Risk and Boosting Supply
Experience from programmes like the Malaysia Digital Economy Corporation’s eLadang initiative (2018–2021) confirmed that DAT adoption directly translates to greater production stability:
- Increased output: Smart fertigation systems delivered a 20% increase in chili yield per season and boosted high-grade chili output. This increased reliability is vital for local food supply consistency.
- Resource efficiency: Automation cut manpower costs by 50% and optimised fertiliser usage, lowering production costs and making Malaysian food production more competitive.
The technological solution exists. However, the challenge is scaling it across the nation’s diverse smallholder base to secure the country’s food supply.
Unequal Access to Finance Threatens Food Security
Despite the proven benefits of digital agriculture technologies (DAT), adoption among smallholders remains low —a direct risk to national food security, as modernisation is essential to address climate pressures and labour shortages. High upfront costs, coupled with an unfavourable risk-reward balance under current lending conditions, discourage investment.
- Rigid repayment schedules: Specialised institutions like Agrobank, which offer targeted agricultural financing, often require quarterly or monthly repayments. These inflexible terms sometimes may not match the seasonal cash flows of smallholders who harvest biannually, creating unsustainable debt pressures.
- Unaddressed risks: Commercial banks are hesitant to lend to smallholders, as conventional financing models cannot accommodate natural risks such as floods, droughts, or wildlife attacks. As a result, large segments of the food production system remain underserved.
Recognising these challenges, the national strategic framework links closing the financing gap directly to achieving food security. The 13th Malaysia Plan (13MP) prioritises improving financial access to drive modernisation, while the Securities Commission Malaysia (SC) actively promotes alternative financing mechanisms—such as Equity Crowdfunding (ECF) and Peer-to-Peer (P2P) financing—for agribusinesses.
Strategic Recommendations: Financial Solutions for Food Security
Scaling DAT adoption requires a collaborative model that fundamentally de-risks the smallholder operation for financial providers.
Financial institutions must move beyond land collateral and conventional credit history by leveraging the verifiable data stream generated by DAT—a strategy endorsed by the World Bank.
- Digital Collateral: The real-time data from IoT systems (automated logs, verified yield forecasts, GAP compliance metrics) should be used as digital collateral. This forms the basis for an alternative credit scoring model, proving the farm’s efficiency and projected income, thereby reducing risk perception. A World Bank-supported pilot in Myanmar successfully issued digitally enabled loans to farmers who did not qualify for traditional credit. The pilot achieved a repayment rate exceeding 97% by better tailoring the product to the smallholder’s situation.
Linking financing to a fully transparent, end-to-end supply chain aligns repayments with real transactions, reducing risk and strengthening the resilience of the entire food system.
- Automated Payment Systems (Financing Integration): Digital platforms connecting farmers, aggregators, and financiers enable seamless mechanisms like invoice discounting. Loan repayment is deducted automatically at the point of sale (when the guaranteed buyer pays the farmer), substantially mitigating default risk for the financier. The AgriFintech firm TechCoop in Vietnam provides integrated solutions combining technology and financial services. By digitising purchase agreements and streamlining financing through an AgriERP platform, they have successfully disbursed over $30 million in loans with a 100% repayment rate to over 250,000 farmers and associated agribusinesses by de-risking the lending through supply chain integration.
Localised support and skills development increase smallholders’ confidence and adoption of digital agriculture technologies.
- Cooperative-Level Maintenance: Empower local farmers’ cooperatives (like Persatuan Pekebun Kecil) to serve as certified DAT maintenance hubs. This ensures farmers have immediate, trusted local technical expertise, boosting confidence in the long-term investment.
- Digital Skills Bundling: All government-supported DAT packages should include mandatory, hands-on digital and financial literacy training.
The technology to achieve Malaysia’s resilient food future is operational and proven. The next critical stage—mass adoption across the smallholder segment—is contingent upon transforming the financial landscape. Through the use of innovative data-driven credit models and the establishment of new public-private partnerships, Malaysia can empower smallholders to become digital entrepreneurs, strengthening domestic food security while setting a blueprint for building resilient and inclusive agricultural systems in Southeast Asia.
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