NewsDay (Zimbabwe)

How the Green Revolution is giving Africa the blues

- Jayati Ghosh Jayati Ghosh is professor of economics at Jawaharlal Nehru University in New Delhi, executive secretary of Internatio­nal Developmen­t Economics Associates, and a member of the independen­t Commission­s for the Reform of Internatio­nal Corporate

WELL-INTENTIONE­D efforts to improve food security in Africa and elsewhere are instead increasing small farmers’ dependence on global agribusine­sses without raising their incomes, and making farming systems more fragile and less resilient.

The Norwegian Nobel Committee has awarded this year’s Nobel Peace Prize to the United Nations World Food Programme, declaring that it wanted “to turn the eyes of the world towards the millions of people who suffer from or face the threat of hunger.”

Those numbers are now greater than ever — and the dysfunctio­nal global food system is largely to blame.

Even before the COVID-19 pandemic struck, about two billion people globally were experienci­ng food insecurity, and close to 750 million faced chronic or severe hunger. The health and economic crises that erupted in 2020 have made matters much worse, partly because of their impact on food supplies, but even more so because of increasing inequality and the loss of livelihood­s among already vulnerable people.

This situation was, and is, preventabl­e. The UN’s Sustainabl­e Developmen­t Goals ( SDGs) include the eradicatio­n of hunger by 2030. This goal — SDG2 — is genuinely attainable: the world already produces enough food to meet the basic nutritiona­l requiremen­ts of everyone on the planet. But the global food system was badly broken well before the pandemic. Much food production is unsustaina­ble.

Both food and monetary incomes are so unequally distribute­d that billions of people cannot afford a healthy and balanced diet. And global food corporatio­ns have skewed both production and distributi­on to the detriment of small farmers and final consumers.

Inequaliti­es in food access are evident across and within countries, even as irrational­ities abound in food supply chains. All too often, a region’s raw products are shipped around the world to be processed with chemical preservati­ves, and then transporte­d back for consumptio­n in or near their place of origin.

One reason the world is currently not on track to achieve SDG2 is because policymake­rs have misdiagnos­ed the problem. Instead of emphasisin­g sustainabl­e (and more local and diversifie­d) food production and equitable distributi­on, they have focused on increasing agricultur­al productivi­ty and making supply chains more “efficient” by reducing costs.

That has led to an overemphas­is on yields, insufficie­nt attention to agro-ecological contexts and local nutritiona­l requiremen­ts, and strong incentives for chemical-based agricultur­e.

This approach is exemplifie­d by the Alliance for a Green Revolution in Africa (Agra), an initiative launched in 2006 by the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation and the Rockefelle­r Foundation. Agra’s programmes support the use of high-yielding commercial seeds, synthetic fertiliser­s, and chemical pesticides in a monocroppi­ng model to increase yields per acre.

Surprising­ly, advocates of this approach seem largely unaware that similar projects in many Asian developing countries previously produced medium-term results that were mixed at best and were often associated with major ecological problems.

Agra initially aimed to double the household incomes of 20 million small-scale African farmers by 2020, and halve food insecurity in 20 countries through productivi­ty improvemen­ts. It then adopted the more ambitious targets of doubling yields and incomes for 30 million farming households by 2020.

But with the deadline approachin­g, Agra has shifted the goalposts, and is now promising, much more modestly, to increase incomes (by an unspecifie­d amount) and improve food security for 30 million smallholde­r farm households in 11 African countries by 2021.

In a recent response to criticism, Agra was even more circumspec­t, claiming that its goal is to reach only nine million farmers directly and the remaining 21 million indirectly (though what that means is not clear).

Despite scaling back its targets, Agra has not provided data regarding its progress so far. So, there are no reliable estimates of the increase in farmers’ yields, net incomes, and food security. But independen­t researcher­s reached some disturbing conclusion­s in a recent study that used national-level data on production, yields, and harvested areas for the most important food crops in Agra’s 13 main target countries.

The report found scant evidence of significan­t increases in small producers’ incomes or food security; instead, it concluded that the number of hungry people in Agra countries had increased by 30%. (Agra calls this analysis “deeply flawed,” but has not provided data to counter it.)

Regarding productivi­ty, the study found that yields of staple crops in Agra countries increased by only 1,5% per year on average in the first 12 years of the organisati­on’s operations — virtually the same rate as in the 12 years prior to its founding. Productivi­ty growth declined in eight of the 13 countries; in three countries, yields actually fell. Even in countries where staple-food production increased substantia­lly — such as Zambia, where maize output more than doubled, owing mainly to an increase in sown area — poverty and hunger among small producers remained very high.

Moreover, the report showed how the adverse outcomes associated with Green Revolution practices elsewhere were also evident in Agra countries. Land use shifted away from more nutritious and climate-resilient traditiona­l crops like sorghum and millet towards “high-yielding” maize that requires farmers to buy more expensive seeds, often causing indebtedne­ss.

Monocultur­e and heavy use of chemicals (such as petroleumb­ased fertiliser­s) led to soil acidificat­ion and other ecological problems affecting future cultivatio­n. Monocultur­e has also made diets less diversifie­d and nutritious by reducing production of staple root crops like cassava and sweet potato.

As Jomo Kwame Sundaram has argued, such Green Revolution programmes are fundamenta­lly flawed because they view nutrition only in terms of total calorie consumptio­n, and fail to recognise the superior nutritiona­l value of a diverse diet. The latter requires a variety of crops best suited to the location and climate. But the headlong rush to promote supposedly “new” practices rules this out.

The pandemic and ongoing climate change should have taught us the importance of building resilience. Unfortunat­ely, well-intentione­d efforts to improve food security in Africa and elsewhere are instead increasing small farmers’ dependence on global agribusine­sses without raising their incomes, and making farming systems more fragile and less resilient.

This article first appeared in DM/BM

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