WAGING WAR ON POVERTY
China and Africa exchange experiences on poverty relief under the FOCAC framework
When she was young, Victoria Sekitoleko had no idea what she would do when she grew up. The one thing she was sure of, however, was that she would never marry a farmer.
The former Ugandan Minister of Agriculture shared this anecdote at the opening ceremony of the Poverty Reduction and Development Conference of the Forum on China-africa Cooperation (FOCAC) in Beijing on August 14.
Growing up in a farming family where money was scarce, one value young Sekitoleko took away from her upbringing was that she needed to get as much education as possible to escape the poverty of rural life.
However, it was not until she entered Makerere University to pursue a bachelor’s degree in agriculture that she understood the value of agriculture and the need for developing the capacity of this sector to alleviate poverty in her country.
In 2011, as a representative of the United Nations Food and Agriculture Organization in China, Sekitoleko was inspired by the Chinese method of poverty reduction. “Today, under the framework of FOCAC, I’m happy to see China and African countries [have] strengthened [their cooperation] in poverty relief,” the rural development professional told Beijing Review.
Out of poverty
According to Justin Yifu Lin, Counselor of the State Council of China and former Chief Economist of the World Bank, when China’s reform and opening up started in late 1978, Sub-saharan Africa’s GDP per capita was more than three times that of China. At that time, 84 percent of Chinese people lived on less than $1.25 a day, the international poverty standard.
However, World Bank statistics show that since the reform and opening- up policy began, China has seen a dramatic decrease of its impoverished population. Its poverty rate dropped to 1.9 percent in 2013 from 88.3 percent in 1981.
Over the past four decades, some 700 million rural residents across China have shaken off the yoke of poverty. In 2017, the per-capita yearly disposable income of rural residents in poverty-stricken areas reached 9,377 yuan ($1,359), an increase of more than 50 percent over 2013, according to Liu Yongfu, head of the State Council Leading Group Office of Poverty Alleviation and Development.
Chinese people have derived great benefits from the country’s economic growth due to strong government support, the active promotion of industrialization and urbanization, as well as an emphasis on infrastructure construction in povertystricken areas.
In December 2015, Chinese President Xi Jinping announced a poverty reduction program as one of the 10 major ChinaAfrica cooperation plans at the 2015 FOCAC Johannesburg Summit in South Africa. Xi pointed out that China’s experience in poverty alleviation could be used to help African countries complete their poverty reduction target.
In recent years, China has made great
As Sekitoleko realized, in many African countries, developing agriculture and increasing farmers’ income are vital to poverty reduction.
According to Josefa Leonel Correia Sacko, Commissioner of Rural Economy and Agriculture of the African Union Commission, Africa has about 600 million hectares of uncultivated arable land, roughly 65 percent of the world’s total. However, many African countries are among the most affected globally by food insecurity and low agricultural productivity.
Transforming the agricultural systems in Africa demands the need to empower poor farmers with technology, improve their access to agricultural knowledge and provide them access to markets, according to experts.
The priorities in agricultural cooperation between China and African countries were therefore established during the Johannesburg Summit. This included carrying out agricultural demonstration projects, transferring technologies and cooperating with African countries to increase productivity. Leaders reaffirmed their commitment to collaboration in the agricultural sector at this year’s Beijing Summit.
For decades, China’s Ministry of Agriculture has been dispatching Chinese agricultural experts and teachers to African countries to provide help in agricultural development. For example, in October 2015, a 10-member mission was sent to Zimbabwe to implement the second bilateral agricultural cooperation program. The experts conducted the first experiment on hybrid rice cultivation in Zimbabwe’s history. The six rice varieties tested yielded more than 10 tons per hectare, setting a new record for the country.
Personnel training
Enjoying a demographic dividend, Africa will be home to 200 million young people aged between 15 and 24 by 2025, taking up 20 percent of the total population of the continent, according to data released by the United Nations. However, the lack of skills is still one of the three major bottlenecks in Africa’s development, with the twin challenges of backward infrastructure