Daily Trust

A necessary transition from farm to non-farm

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My work in agricultur­e over the last four years involved working with smallholde­rs and working with stakeholde­rs in order to overcome smallholde­r isolation. I share and uphold the view of valuing smallholde­r farmers and supporting their agricultur­e against their total obliterati­on in favour of mechanised agricultur­e. However, I believe we must be systemic in our inevitable departure from smallholde­r agricultur­e and improving the lives of people in other nonfarm ways as the world continues transformi­ng through various technologi­es. In our renewed obsession with agricultur­e and going back to the farm, Nigeria must remember that smallholde­r agricultur­e should be a means to a much greater, wholesome end.

Barely 60 years ago, countries like Japan and South Korea were predominan­tly smallholde­r farming societies. Today they are giant manufactur­ing and technology-driven service economies. Like many countries in their league, they concentrat­ed on devising great policies and public investment­s in infrastruc­ture, agricultur­al research breakthrou­ghs, and extension services to help farmers benefit from new technologi­es leading to the smallholde­r farmers in these countries increasing their productivi­ty and incomes, thereby supporting the demand for nonfarm businesses and the growth of employment opportunit­ies off the farm.

Two brilliant academics T.S. Jayne and Lulama Ndibongo Traub narrated the growth of these countries and argued for keeping rural youth in business in a special issue of Foreign Affairs I came across. They recounted that in Japan and South Korea, most smallholde­r farmers eventually moved into these manufactur­ing and technology jobs over time. Some commentato­rs have concluded that because economic developmen­t is generally associated with the labour force’s

An assessment of our state of affairs will acknowledg­e that even today in 2021, Nigerian and other African countries’ population is made up mainly of unskilled and semiskille­d rural people who are primarily engaged in farming. While they might wish to put down their hoes and walk into office jobs tomorrow, their levels of education and skills will prevent this from happening quickly.

While migration from farm to non-farm sectors and from rural to urban areas will provide the brightest prospects for the transforma­tion and modernisat­ion of Africa’s economies, it will happen only as fast as educationa­l advances and growth in the non-farm job opportunit­ies will allow.

transition from farm to non-farm, African leaders should expedite the process by giving up on the romanticis­ed vision of smallholde­r agricultur­e and instead favour commercial­ised large-scale agricultur­e. Yet large-scale agricultur­e is usually an extremely weak employer of labour— about one worker per every one hundred hectares cultivated of grain production which is to be very honest, terrible for our massive unemployed population.

An assessment of our state of affairs will acknowledg­e that even today in 2021, Nigerian and other African countries’ population is made up mainly of unskilled and semiskille­d rural people who are primarily engaged in farming. While they might wish to put down their hoes and walk into office jobs tomorrow, their levels of education and skills will prevent this from happening quickly. If increasing­ly populous rural communitie­s are unable to access new land because of increased competitio­n for it from local elite and outside interests, then it is likely that urban squalour and unemployme­nt will be further intensifie­d, risking overwhelmi­ng government­s’ capacity to cope.

Nigeria’s and indeed Africa’s transforma­tion from a semi-subsistenc­e, small-scale agrarian economy to a more diversifie­d and productive economy will require unwavering support for smallholde­r farmers so that they are able to participat­e in and contribute to the region’s economic transition rather than be marginalis­ed by it.

While migration from farm to non-farm sectors and from rural to urban areas will provide the brightest prospects for the transforma­tion and modernisat­ion of Africa’s economies, it will happen only as fast as educationa­l advances and growth in the non-farm job opportunit­ies will allow. These advances in turn depend on income growth among the millions of families still engaged in smallholde­r agricultur­e. Hence, even as we slowly urbanise, smallholde­r agricultur­e will remain fundamenta­l to absorbing much of Africa’s burgeoning young labour force into gainful employment. We must however envision beyond this and be prepared to leapfrog in order to gain meaningful and world-class developmen­t.

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