1 / 14

Directorate for Sustainable Economic Development

Directorate for Sustainable Economic Development. Private sector development in developing countries: is agriculture still on the agenda? Stakeholder Meeting: Rethinking Agriculture in Development The Hague, December 14th 2006. Private sector development and agriculture.

wing-burns
Télécharger la présentation

Directorate for Sustainable Economic Development

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Directorate for Sustainable Economic Development Private sector development in developing countries: is agriculture still on the agenda? Stakeholder Meeting: Rethinking Agriculture in Development The Hague, December 14th 2006.

  2. Private sector development and agriculture Link economic growth – poverty alleviation • Growth income per capita • Pro-poor growth and job creation Economic growth through: • Productivity growth • Trade, FDI, etc • Private sector development

  3. Three levels of intervention • International markets (IM) • National enabling environment (NB) • Direct business support (OB)

  4. Six challenges in PSD organised in clusters • Legal and regulatory environment • Infrastructure • Market access and market development • Financial sector development • Access to skills and knowledge • Public-private partnerships

  5. Legal and regulatory environment • Why? Less costs and risks for business and better level playing field. • What? Property rights, customs, commercial law, corruption, business registration and labour law. • How? • Bilateral: policy dialogue, PPD, embassy programs • Multilateral: ICF, Doing Business, partnerships with WB / IFC/ AfDB

  6. Infrastructure • Why? Basic services are needed for economic development • What? Roads, energy, ICT, water and sanitation, transport • How? • Bilateral: FMO (ORET and LDC), with DMW on water and energy (EUR 400 mln), embassy programs • Multilateral: PIDG, PPIAF

  7. Market access and development • Improve market access through: • Negotiations: WTO, EPA’s • Influence EU market regulation • Stimulate rural-urban linkages in the countries • Promote market development through: • Capacity-building: Aid for Trade (WTO-related) • Market information: IFDC, CBI • Market chains • Standards: Eurepgap, SPS and TBT

  8. Financial Sector Development • Developing the access to financial services, microfinance and insurances and improving the capacity of financial institutions. • Bilateral instruments: • FMO: Massif (credit, equity, microfinance) • Partnerships (NFX, HIF, NPM) • Embassy programs • Multilateral instruments: • IFI’s (e.g. IFC): CGAP • FIRST, CRM

  9. Access to skills and knowledge • Vocational training, business capacity building, CSR, business membership organisations. • Bilateral instruments: • EVD (PSOM, PESP, marketing, match-making) • PUM • DECP • POP • Trade Unions programme • Embassy programs • Multilateral partnerships

  10. Public-private partnerships • Why? More leverage, additional resources, effectiveness to achieve development goals • How? Collaboration through pooling knowledge and resources and coordination efforts • Examples: NFX, HIF, AgriProFocus, WSSD partnerships

  11. PSD as instrument to promote agriculture • 70% of the funds channelled through PSOM are for agriculture • The Netherlands supports the removal of subsidies (WTO) • Producer organisations, fair trade org., CBI etc. • Partnership with IFDC • PPP’s (9 in agriculture) • WSSD, Land Alliances for National Development, BNPP • Agri-Profocus

  12. Challenges to be addressed • Understanding and improving the rural environment and the role of agriculture in the economy • Professionalisation of agriculture • Privatization of agricultural services and industries • Improving the competitiveness of agriculture in low income countries • Increasing access to markets • Appropriate legal and regulatory frameworks for promotion of agriculture • Building knowledge and capacities and developing instruments to do the above.

More Related