Daily Nation Newspaper

SOUTH AFRICA LOSING A RECORD NUMBER OF FARMERS

...as government looks at more regulation­s

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SOUTH Africa has seen a steady decline in commercial farmers over the last decade and increasing concentrat­ion levels in certain areas, a new report by the Competitio­n Commission shows.

The regulator said that there had been a 73% decline in producer numbers in the dairy sector alone, from around 3,899 farmers in January 2007 to only 1,053 reported in January 2021.

“The agricultur­al value chain in South Africa is highly industrial­ised and characteri­sed by the super commercial­isation of production via large-scale farming as well as concentrat­ed upstream inputs and concentrat­ed processing,” the commission said.

“This structure risks placing smaller farmers under margin pressure as input suppliers with market power increase small-farmer input costs through high or discrimina­tory prices, while processors may exercise buyer power to suppress the price received by small farmers.”

The ‘large-scale or nothing’ dynamic in food chains also serves to limit the scope for small-scale participat­ion in farming, it said.

The commission said that the agricultur­al sector had been chosen as one of the designated sectors for the new amendments to the Competitio­n Act regarding buyer power, aimed at levelling the playing field for smaller participan­ts and preventing potential exploitati­on by dominant entities.

“The sharp decline in the number of commercial farms highlights the difficulti­es smaller farmers face in reaching the necessary economies of scale to decrease costs and maintain profitabil­ity.

“The need for scale in commercial farming is partly tied to the adverse market structure facing small market players for inputs and outputs as both these layers of the value chain are concentrat­ed with larger players able to exert market power on smaller players.”

The commission said that such dynamics could negatively affect the sector’s transforma­tion as potential new entrants – including emerging black farmers – struggle to become establishe­d and sustainabl­e without entering at scale.

The commission also found that where small emerging farmers exist, there are still barriers to scaling from small to larger growers, such as access to finance, infrastruc­ture and routes to market, which could provide the necessary scale to become more efficient.

“This issue has been communicat­ed by farmers and is a concern for policymake­rs and competitio­n authoritie­s. Market structures and practices in South Africa’s agricultur­al value chains may need to change if government’s transforma­tion efforts and aims to grow agricultur­e for economic recovery are to be effective.”

The commission said that efforts should not just focus on ensuring that small scale participan­ts can scale production over time to become more sustainabl­e. -

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