1 / 28

AN OVERVIEW OF THE AGRICULTURE SECTOR IN AFRICA

AN OVERVIEW OF THE AGRICULTURE SECTOR IN AFRICA. T. OLALEKAN WILLIAMS. www.thecommonwealth.org. PRESENTATION OUTLINE. CURRENT CONTEXT OF AFRICAN AGRICULTURE - Role, Key Challenges, Successes. KEY QUESTIONS. CHANGING ECONOMIC ENVIRONMENT FACING AGRICULTURE.

dwight
Télécharger la présentation

AN OVERVIEW OF THE AGRICULTURE SECTOR IN AFRICA

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. AN OVERVIEW OF THE AGRICULTURE SECTOR IN AFRICA T. OLALEKAN WILLIAMS www.thecommonwealth.org

  2. PRESENTATION OUTLINE • CURRENT CONTEXT OF AFRICAN AGRICULTURE - Role, Key Challenges, Successes • KEY QUESTIONS • CHANGING ECONOMIC ENVIRONMENT FACING AGRICULTURE • PRIORITY ACTIONS TO STRENGTHEN AGRICULTURAL SECTOR

  3. Current Context (Role) • Agriculture in Africa accounts for: • - 35-50% of GDP in Africa • - 70% or more of total employment • Nearly 65% of Africans depend on agriculture • as their primary source of livelihood • Smallholder farmers account for more than • 90% of total agricultural production

  4. Current Context: Role (contd.) Upshot • Agriculture is a big sector in Africa • and it does not take a large increase in • agricultural growth to have significant • impact on the national economy and • average incomes

  5. Current Context (Key Challenges) • Poorly functioning markets • Limited access to finance • Poorly developed physical and social • infrastructure • Inequitable access to productive resources • Risks associated with adverse weather and • prices and lack of appropriate financial • instruments (e.g. insurance)

  6. Current Context (Success Stories) Cotton in West Africa • 9% annual growth in productionand exports • over 40 years (1960-2000) • 200,000 farm households grow cotton, 30% • of Mali’s population

  7. Current Context (Success Stories) Horticulture Exports from Kenya • Fruit & Vegetable exports quadrupled in real • terms between 1974-1999, exceeding $150 m • per year and becoming Kenya’s 3rd leading • foreign exchange earner • 100,000 small farmers produce and export • fruits and vegetables • Smallholders earn an average of $188 per year • from export of fruits and vegetables

  8. Current Context (Success Stories) Cassava Transformation in Nigeria • Production tripled within a decade (1984-92) • Nigeria surpasses Brazil as world’s leading • cassava producer • 60% of farm households plant improved • varieties • Resulting price fall benefits consumers, • making cassava a powerful anti-poverty • weapon

  9. CRITICAL QUESTIONS • Are any of the successes of African agriculture • replicable across wider areas to benefit larger • numbers of people? • How do we generate new thinking, grounded in • national and international realities, to revitalize • African agriculture? • How can new strategies and alliances in favour • of African agriculture be brought about?

  10. Changing Economic Environment International Environment • Heavy farm subsidies in OECD countries • Shifting composition of traded goods • Global consolidation in food retailing • Preferential access to markets in EU & USA • - ‘Everything But Arms’ & AGOA

  11. High Price of Agricultural Protectionism in Rich Countries • US $1 Billion a day supporting their own • agricultural sectors • Cotton production in West Africa supports • 11 million people. When world prices sunk in • 2001 due to US cotton subsidies, the region • lost US $ 190 million

  12. Changing Economic Environment National Environment • Regulatory reforms (e.g. market liberalization) • New policy initiatives in Nigeria • 2000 – Merger of NACB, PBN & FEAP to • form NACRDB • 2003 – Small & Medium Enterprise • Development Agency of Nigeria • (SMEDAN) • 2005 – Pilot Microfinance Scheme

  13. Changing Economic Environment National Environment (continued) • Emergence of Supermarkets with fresh food • retailing sections

  14. PRIORITY ACTIONS

  15. STRENGTHENING AGRIBUSINESS

  16. Public Sector’s Role • Tackle market failure to reduce the transaction costs • and risks that inhibit the private sector and restrict • access of farmers and SMEs to markets • Invest in core public goods that build enterprise • competitiveness, e.g. infrastructure, R & E etc. • Reduce, simplify or remove regulations and costs • that create a competitive disadvantage for farmers and • SMEs

  17. Public Sector’s Role • Create policies that support pro-poor agriculture. • Policies to reduce inequality to productive assets • and to secure property rights • Fill the agricultural finance gap • Policies to support institutions (e.g. producer • organizations, marketing associations) that will • assist to connect rural poor producers to markets

  18. Private Sector’s Role • Development, organization and management of supply • chains – hear and see the market • Investment in market expansion and competitiveness • enhancing measures, e.g. processing facilities • Work with public sector to develop policies • Develop linkages with multinationals and large • domestic companies

  19. Civil Society’s Role • Mobilisation and organisation of rural poor producers • Awareness raising to encourage stakeholder acceptance • and adoption of new export requirements • Pilot testing of new ideas and projects with the poor • Advocacy – bring the demands and needs of the poor • to the attention of governments and private sector

  20. Organizational structures to strengthen pro-poor agribusiness development • Contract farming involving out-growers and a link- • exporter • Farmer-controlled enterprises • - Linkage independent • - Linkage-dependent • Cross-border agricultural supply chains • Clusters and networks linked with intellectual • property rights

  21. Examples of ComSec technical assistance programs to strengthen agribusiness • Commonwealth Secretariat technical assistance to • Nigeria to improve compliance with SPS measures • for non-traditional exports • Commonwealth Secretariat support to The Gambia in • agro-processing • Commonwealth Secretariat-FAO collaborative • technical assistance in Eastern & Southern Africa

  22. THANK YOU FOR YOUR ATTENTION www.thecommonwealth.org

More Related