South Africa: Debunking African
Agriculture Myths
In a presentation to the World Economic
Forum on Africa in June 2016, Kenya- born Calestous Juma, a professor at
Harvard University, explains the world has taken a generalised view of African
agriculture and how this perception can be changed.
Juma is an internationally
recognised authority in the application of science and technology to
sustainable development worldwide. He was named one of the most influential 100
Africans in 2012, 2013 and 2014 by the New African magazine. He is the director
of the Agricultural Innovation in Africa Project, and part of the Bill and
Melinda Gates Foundation. In his 2011 book, The New Harvest: Agricultural
Innovation in Africa, Juma outlines policies and institutional changes to
promote agricultural innovation across the African continent.
. @calestous #AskCJuma #TEEPagricReport
pic.twitter.com/u9zHa98PQ4
— GroIntel (@GroIntel) June 18, 2016
See Juma's
article:
From newspaper
editors to TV anchors to bloggers, the default symbol of African agriculture is
an African woman holding a hand hoe. This imagery highlights the drudgery
African women face in farming. But it also conflates family farming with the
broader agricultural enterprise.
As I argue in
The New Harvest: Agricultural Innovation in Africa, farming is only a small but
important
part of the agribusiness value chain. The value chain includes
resource data processing, input provision, production, aggregating (covering
bulking, cleaning and grading), processing and packaging, retailing and
recycling. Making the value chain work efficiently involves connecting farmers
to markets.
As noted in a
recent report by the Tony Elumelu Foundation, Unleashing Africa's Agricultural
Entrepreneurs, the sector "accounts for 32% of Africa's gross domestic
product, and employs over 65% of its labour force."
Taking the
value chain approach, the World Bank has estimated that Africa's agribusiness
market will reach $1-trillion (about R15-trillion) in 2030. This estimate does
not include auxiliary industries that will arise from the expansion of the
sector.
For example, efficient markets rely on effective information flow. New firms
such as Gro Intelligence are emerging to fill the data gap. Similarly, the
expansion of rural energy, transport, irrigation and telecommunications
infrastructure will also spur the rise of support industries.
@thinkcally #Gro-Graphic on Africa's
developing #seed market. pic.twitter.com/hNBG6jIbTe
— GroIntel (@GroIntel) June 18, 2016
Too much focus on farming
This is one of
the ways the long value chain of agribusiness serves as a driver for industrial
transformation. Few other sectors offer Africa such a broad range of
opportunities for technological innovation and entrepreneurial development.
There are templates for business models that can be readily adopted. The key is
to define agribusinesses as learning opportunities from the outset, as
demonstrated by the work of the Africa Atlantic Holdings.
Past efforts
to promote agribusiness were not successful partly because of the narrow focus
on farming. This approach also failed to appreciate the importance of investing
in basic rural infrastructure without which neither production nor markets can
function. In addition, the focus on farming precluded consideration of the role
of higher technical training in agribusiness.
The general
policy prescription was that farmers did not need more than primary education
to function. In many cases, agriculture is more complex that manufacturing,
where many functions can be automated and products can be generated just in
time. The complex process of plant or animal growth demands more versatile
knowledge sources and husbandry that cannot be readily automated.
The focus on
farming also created biases in the provision of incentives such as credit,
insurance and technical support to farmers. Urban enterprises, especially those
involved in manufacturing, have access to a wide range of enabling incentives.
The same is not true of agriculture, especially where it is perceived narrowly
as farming. Agribusiness needs to be supported like other ventures. Farmers
need to be viewed as entrepreneurs and innovators, not simply as producers for
downstream operations.
. @thinkcally @calestous #AskCJuma #TEEPagricReport Yield & Farm Size in
Kenya,Malawi,Tanzania & Uganda #Gro- Graphic pic.twitter.com/6fNVkmphou
— GroIntel (@GroIntel) June 18, 2016
A bright future for agribusiness in Africa
The good news
is that young people in many parts of Africa see great potential in
agribusiness. But it needs to be put on par with other sectors. Because of a
long history of neglect, young people venturing in to agribusiness lack access
to capital. But even more critical is the lack of mentors who can guide them
through the early phases of their start-ups.
In addition to
mentorship, young agripreneurs could also benefit from investment in adequate
infrastructure. They already know the power of mobile technology. But what they
might need most is access to broadband, which also helps link them to knowledge
centres given the absence of extension services. Today, the cost of broadband
is prohibitively expensive, despite the fact that it is essential for dynamic
business operations.
One possible
way to resolve this could be to provide “broadband grants” in the same way the
US government provided “land grants”. Private enterprises can also purchase
broadband and donate it to selected agribusiness start-ups as part of their
corporate social responsibility.
There are many
opportunities for leveraging the growing interest in agribusiness to expand the
sector. These opportunities are diverse and lie not only along the full value
chain, but also in farms of all sizes - small, medium-sized and large. The
starting point should not be driven by opportunity or ideology or dogma about
farm size. There are many enterprises that do engage in agribusiness but if
given an opportunity they could diversify into the sector. This could be
enterprises that are seeking new opportunities.
In China, for
example, coal-mining firms are starting to diversify into agribusiness in light
of new restrictions imposed on the sector to reduce carbon dioxide emissions.
In Africa, some oil companies might also explore moving into agribusiness given
the uncertainties in the sector.
Agribusiness in Africa needs to be nudged towards a tipping point from which it
can take off. The push will need to come from a collaboration between
government, business, academia and civil society. It will require a collective
effort.
. @calestous #AskCJuma #TEEPagricReport
#Gro-Graphic: Only 2% of SSA university graduates specialize in #agriculture
pic.twitter.com/DVXsG0t6oZ
— GroIntel (@GroIntel) June 18, 2016
Modernising African agriculture
One additional
way to promote agribusiness is to recognise individuals or organisations that
have made outstanding contributions to different sections of the value chain.
Many of the existing prizes tend to focus on production, thereby reinforcing
the narrow farming image. The newly established Africa Food Prize, with a
judging panel chaired by former Nigerian President Olusegun Obasanjo, could
serve as a role model in emphasizing the agribusiness approach in its awardees.
The good news
is that African governments, as illustrated by the case of Nigeria, are
starting to appreciate the importance of agribusiness in long-term economic
transformation. But appreciation is not enough. We not only need heads of state
and government to serve as champions, we also need policy consistency. The two
are important because of the long-term nature of agricultural transformation.
In one of her
signature appeals for the modernization of African agriculture, the chairperson
of the African Union, Nkosazana Dlamini-Zuma, said that hand-held hoe should be
in the museum, not in the hands of African farmers. The quickest way to consign
this symbol of drudgery to the history books is to shift our thinking from
traditional farming to agribusiness. That is the root of Africa's coming
prosperity.
. @calestous @Kayisa #AskCJuma
#TEEPagricReport #Gro-Graphic on ag higher education pic.twitter.com/cVQwu6902i
— GroIntel (@GroIntel) June 18, 2016
Source: WEF
Africa
No comments:
Post a Comment