In rural areas, agricultural activity is facing growing economic pressure. Behind the apparent vitality of farms lies a darker reality: production costs are rising at a rate far exceeding the income generated from harvests, destabilizing the financial equilibrium of producers.
A combination of increasingly expensive inputs, unstable fuel prices, and costly labor is drastically reducing profit margins. Even in rural areas where yields are considered satisfactory, profits struggle to keep pace, leaving many farms in a precarious state.
This financial spiral primarily affects small and medium-sized operations, hinders investments, and delays the modernization of the agricultural sector.
In the longer term, the entire production chain faces potential disruptions, with repercussions for food security and the stability of local markets.
Confronted by these challenges, agricultural stakeholders are calling for tailored support mechanisms, more effective price regulation, and public policies capable of preserving the viability of a sector essential to the livelihoods of communities.

