Speech Delivered by President Akinwumi Adesina of the African
Development Bank at the 7th African Agricultural Science Week and FARA General
Assembly, held in Kigali, Rwanda, June 13, 2016
Good morning Your Excellency President Paul Kagame ably represented
by the Prime Minister, Honorable Anastase Murekezi, the AU Commissioner for
Human Resources, Science and Technology, H.E. Martial de Paul Ikounga, the EU
Representative in Rwanda, H.E. Michael Ryan, Hon. Geraldine Mukeshimana,
Minister for Agriculture and Animal Resources for Rwanda, Honorable Ministers,
heads of diplomatic agencies, scientists, farmers, distinguished ladies and
gentlemen. Let me welcome you all to the 7th African Agricultural Science Week and
FARA General Assembly.
FARA is doing a great job for Africa, mobilizing the research
community to work for the development of scientific innovations to drive
agricultural growth. Let me applaud Dr. Akinbamijo for his excellent leadership
as head of FARA.
Let me thank Rwanda for hosting the Africa Science week – and
President Kagame for hosting the Kigali Round Table to call for action on
agricultural science and innovation.
There is no substitute for
science, technologies and innovations. And the timing of this event is
important. The recent issue of the Economist talks about how science and
technologies are transforming the agricultural sector, more than ever before.
From the use of modern biotechnology, drones, smart systems for efficient
management of water and nutrients, technologies and innovations are turning
farms into “intelligent farms”.
Africa needs to invest more in science and technology to become
more efficient and competitive in agriculture – and to diversify rapidly its economies.
For Africa must fully unlock its immense agricultural potential. That potential
is massive: Africa has 65% of all the arable land left in the world to feed 9
billion people by 2050. Africa cannot eat potential.
Therefore, what Africa does with agriculture is not only important
for Africa: it will shape the future of food in the world.
That is why today, I call for greater investments in the
agriculture sector for Africa – and in particular, for greater investments in
agricultural science, technology and innovation. I am sure this is your desire
as well, as the scientific community of Africa, gathered here today.
But there are hard questions we must ask ourselves.
The issue is what kind of agriculture are we investing in, what do
we expect from the investment and then what type of investments are needed to
get the expected results? My main thesis in this discussion today is that we
cannot expect to simply change investment in agricultural research. We need to
first change the environment which agricultural research feeds into; to raise
the level of investments for agriculture, and by implication derived demand for
agricultural research and innovations.
The challenge has always been that the agricultural sector has been
looked at as a social or development sector. This approach has not been helpful
for the sector. The focus has always been on how to use agriculture to manage
rural poverty, not for creating wealth. It is incomprehensible that a sector
that accounts for up to 60% of the labor force in many African countries barely
generates much in terms of revenue for governments.
The high level of poverty in the rural areas, which depend largely
on agriculture, means that agriculture is given a lip service. The farmers –
majority of who are women - are not organized, so they cannot push governments
as is done in developed economies – and hold them to accountability. The high
poverty levels sometimes allow farmers to be used for political gains, only
during elections, with short term consumables to placate them for votes,
without any serious commitment to greater investments in their sector. Lacking
strong political weight, they are easily forgotten, marginalized, in favor of
the more powerful, but consumption driven, urban elites.
With rapid population growth, increased susceptibility to climate
change, rural economies in many parts of Africa have become zones of misery.
With limited economic opportunities, rural youth move out in droves to the
urban areas, join the rickety boats to escape towards Europe – with many dying
in the process – and worse: become susceptible areas where terrorists recruit
into their ranks.
Therefore, there cannot be a secure Africa unless we first and
foremost revive the rural economies. We must turn these areas into zones of
economic prosperity. And for that to happen, we must transform the main source
of livelihoods – agriculture – into a wealth-creating sector.
But equally important are other reasons.
Today, Africa spends $35 billion on importing food. This is
projected to grow to $110 billion by 2025. Africa is importing what it should
be producing, creating poverty within Africa and exporting jobs outside of
Africa. Scarce foreign exchange is used to buy food. Lacking ability to feed
itself, Africa becomes vulnerable, dependent on market forces to feed its
burgeoning population. Any shock to global food production will have direct
price transmission into Africa, especially into the rural areas, where the
percentage of net buyers of food is high, despite being the zones to produce
food to feed their countries. Investing in agriculture therefore makes economic
and security sense.
But we need to make the case to Ministers of Finance, not to
ministers of agriculture. If the rate of returns on agricultural research is as
high as clearly demonstrated over time by several empirical studies, the
question then is: why is it that Ministers of Finance have not understood this
and invested more in the agricultural sector? One reason is that the political
economy has not favored the rural sector. Also, translating the expected rate
of returns to agricultural research into real benefits requires a lot more than
the research system. It requires comprehensive investments in rural
infrastructure, market development, transforming the financial sector to lend
more to agriculture and greater investments by the private sector in logistics,
warehousing, storage, and processing and value addition.
A Minister of Finance is more likely to listen to the case for
greater investments in agriculture, when it can be shown that the sector will
add greater value to the economy, expand foreign exchange earnings,
significantly reduce imports, drive down inflation through higher productivity
and food production, and create quality decent jobs for the youths.
So let me make the case.
A more food secure Africa will spend less of its foreign exchange
importing food. That will help stabilize the exchange rate and local currencies
– which is good for the economy. A more food secure Africa will have greater
savings, as disposable incomes will rise for both rural and urban populations.
A more food secure Africa will free up resources for high value food, feed,
horticulture, floriculture and livestock exports to earn foreign exchange. Food
prices represent the highest share of consumer price index in Africa. By
producing more food and reducing the price of food, inflation will decline,
making it easier for central banks to address inflation. Clearly, therefore, a
more food secure Africa will ensure strong macroeconomic and fiscal
stabilization for Africa.
Africa must also position itself to take advantage of fast growing
regional agricultural markets. It is estimated that food and agricultural
markets in Africa will rise to $1 trillion by 2030. The question for Africa is
this: will Africa tap into this huge market by investing now in modernizing its
agricultural sector or will it simply become a net food importing region? The
answer to this must be to modernize the agricultural system.
To achieve this, Africa must rapidly invest in supporting the
development of its agro-industry. Africa should not be a consumption center, it
must be an agro-industrial center. Africa must export processed cocoa, not
cocoa beans. It must export specialized coffee with distinctively “aroma of
Africa” instead of coffee beans, and export finished textile products not
cotton lint. The remarkable market progress of Kenya, Tanzania, Ghana and
Ethiopia in the global horticulture industry shows that with well-designed
policies and financing and infrastructure support, Africa can get to the top of
the global food value chains.
And that is what the African Development Bank wants to help Africa
to achieve.
The new agricultural transformation strategy of the African Development
Bank is directed at supporting African countries to achieve the modernization
of their agricultural sectors – to turn agriculture into a business all across
Africa. The goal is to eliminate extreme poverty, reduce food imports, move
Africa to the top of the agricultural value chains, and expand foreign exchange
earnings.
I am excited that Ministers of Finance across Africa endorsed this
plan two weeks ago at the Annual General Meeting of the African Development
Bank held in Lusaka, Zambia.
A key component of our strategy is the Technologies for African
Agricultural Transformation (TAAT), which has as objective to scale up
agricultural technologies to reach millions of farmers in Africa within ten
years. I am very pleased that the Consultative Group on International
Agricultural Research (CGIAR) and the Forum for Agricultural Research in Africa
(FARA) are helping to spearhead this initiative, under the leadership of the
International Institute for Tropical Agriculture. I am equally delighted that
several multilateral and bilateral financing and development institutions have
endorsed the plan, including Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation, USAID, World
Bank, IFAD, WFP and FAO.
To drive this, the African Development Bank has also raised the
profile of agriculture, with the establishment of a new Vice Presidency for
Agriculture, Human and Social Development. Given the focus of the TAAT on
agricultural research, the Bank will work to ensure that it succeeds.
We must get technologies into the hands of farmers. As late Nobel
laureate, Norman Borlaug used to say “take it to the farmers”.
I know the effects of this very well, as a former Minister of
Agriculture in Nigeria. So powerful was the impact of new agricultural
technologies, coupled with financing and private sector growth, that Nigeria
expanded its national food production by an additional 21 million metric tons
within four years.
Africa now has several success stories that prove that we can do
it. Rwanda has drastically reduced the population that is malnourished. Kenya’s
agriculture is pushing the frontiers on horticulture globally. Ethiopia’s
remarkable growth of its floriculture market foot print globally is an amazing
feat. Senegal is well on its way to achieving self -sufficiency in rice.
Morocco and Algeria have shown great strides in agricultural value chains
exports to Europe.
And with technologies from science, we can do even more.
Insect and drought resistant maize can transform all the maize
belts of Africa. New high yielding cassava varieties stand ready to help
unleash a revolution with cassava, for starch, ethanol, high fructose cassava
syrup to replace sugar, or for high quality cassava flour for making composite
wheat-cassava flour bread. Advances in genetics now make it possible to incorporate
vital vitamins and minerals in our foods, such as iron enriched beans right
here in Rwanda, orange flesh sweet potato, high lysine maize or vitamin A rich
cassava. Across the banana belts of eastern highlands, research has made
available high yielding tissue culture banana, resistant to pests and diseases.
Advances in livestock and fisheries genetics, and aquaculture, have opened up
huge opportunities for meeting protein needs in Africa.
Africa has all it needs to win in agriculture. My mentor, the late Dr.
Norman Borlaug (the man who led the Asian green revolution) and I were walking
together on the streets of Manhattan New York in the spring of 2006. He paused
and asked me whether I played soccer. I asked why. He said “in soccer, when you
score the first goal you will have the confidence you can win. So go out there
and score a goal for African agriculture”. I never forgot that – even now, as
President of the African Development Bank.
I am determined that Africa will score a lot of goals in
agriculture.
But to score those goals, there is need to open up the agriculture
sector to the private sector. Governments should enable greater participation
of the private sector in the agriculture, food and agribusiness industries. The
development of value chains drives profitability in agriculture. Fiscal
incentives are needed to attract the private sector to invest in agro-allied
industries, which will provide access to markets to farmers, stabilize market
prices, reduce post-harvest losses and add value to agricultural products.
We must also invest in the youth to get into agriculture. The
higher the share of young and educated people in the agriculture sector, the
faster the sector will grow and the higher will be its profitability. The Bank
is already leading the development of a continent-wide effort to get younger
and better educated youths into agriculture, as a business. The Bank’s flag
ship program, ENABLE Youth’s Initiative, which currently has enlisted interests
from over 30 countries, will help support the emergence of a new generation of
young commercial farmers and agribusinesses for Africa.
We must urgently accelerate commercial lending by banks and
institutional investors into the agriculture sector. Successful experiences in
Nigeria, Kenya, Tanzania, Ghana and Mozambique show that with properly
structured risk sharing instruments, commercial banks will lend more to
agriculture, with lower risks of loss. The ADB will be working with central
Banks across Africa to set up risk sharing facilities to help de-risk
commercial bank lending to the sector. This will help raise the profitability
in the sector and greater private sector investments.
With an improved agricultural sector environment, with better
policies, incentives, infrastructure and institutions that can drive
accelerated growth, the predicted high rates of returns to agricultural
research will be achieved. We would move from possible impact or predicted
returns, to actual impacts and real returns on the ground. This will require
greater levels of support for national agricultural research and extension
systems, sub-regional research organizations, farmers’ organizations and the
international agricultural research institutions.
Africa must feed Africa. And the African Development Bank stands
ready to fully support Africa to do so. Africa must develop itself with pride.
And there is no pride for Africa without being able to feed itself. The African
Development Bank plans to invest about $24 billion (or $2.4 billion per year)
over ten years to help drive the agricultural transformation of Africa. This is
a big deal for the Bank – and a big deal for Africa. It will represent a 400%
increase in financing to the agricultural sector by the Bank.
But we cannot do this alone.
We will forge very strong alliances and partnerships. We will work
with NEPAD, the Economic Commission for Africa and multilateral and bilateral
finance institutions in this drive. We will support FARA, African agricultural
research institutions, and universities. We will support the international
agricultural research systems. We will support countries to give voice to
farmers, youth and women and their associations. And we will support the
private sector. Together with the African Union, we will stand in support of
African governments, as they change the environment for agriculture – and fully
turn agriculture into a business: to diversify African economies and finally
turn Africa’s huge agricultural potential into its most important economic
dividend.
Let’s go out there and, together, score the goals for African
agriculture.
Thank you very much.
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