A nascent tech hub followed and outside of agriculture, apps were created for everything from healthcare to Myanmar’s parliament.
Farmers, many among the country’s poorest, today find themselves with a mobile computer in their hands — a game-changer for the entrepreneurs behind ‘Green Way,’ who launched their app in 2016 and now employ 18 full-time staff.
“‘Green way’ is my dream to link farmers and experts,” Yin Yin Phyu told AFP. “The farmers can get help whenever they need.”
Some 70,000 farmers have already downloaded the app although she hears far more are accessing it through phone-to-phone sharing.
– Field work –
Greater productivity at Myanmar’s farms could reshape both its economy and society, says 71-year-old agricultural expert Myo Myint.
“Many workers migrate to other countries because they can’t make enough money to live from agriculture in Myanmar,” he says.
“Farmers need technology and investment.”
A 2017 World Bank study found farmers in some areas of the country still earn as little as $2 per day.
Productivity is also relatively low with only 23kg of rice paddy generated in one day of work in Myanmar compared to 62kg in Cambodia, 429kg in Vietnam, and 547kg in Thailand.
The founder of the “Golden Paddy” app says the new tech is not best suited to struggling farmers at the bottom of the ladder.
They do not have the time or resources to implement advice on changing seeds or fertiliser.
Instead, the apps are aimed at smallholder farmers to allow them to “become a little more commercial,” Dutchman Erwin Sikma explains.
Similar projects in other developing countries – in India and parts of Africa – are still reliant on old-style phones and information by SMS.
Myanmar now has the chance to leapfrog that era to become an agricultural trailblazer.
But that also means the country is in uncharted territory.
“We have a lot of first-mover disadvantages,” Erwin Sikma says.
“It’s a start-up in a completely new model in a completely new market or economy so we need all the help we can get.”