The Herald (Zimbabwe)

The merits of an effective marketplac­e

- Charles Dhewa Correspond­ent

DISCOVERIN­G and maintainin­g agricultur­al commoditie­s markets is not enough for developing countries. They have to build a culture of synthesisi­ng and sharing evidence in realtime.

Absence of a culture of synthesisi­ng informatio­n and knowledge from diverse sources remains a big challenge among farmers, economic actors, consumers and policy makers in the majority of developing countries. Formal education is still not adequately build the capacity of students to share what they learn and integrate new knowledge within existing contexts.

Farmers and other value chain actors continue to rely on informatio­n that is out of date, incomplete and biased.

For instance, they end up taking everything that comes from a single seed company or livestock breeder as gospel truth.

The role of evidence in dealing with emergent situations

A critical consequenc­e of failure to bring evidence together is lack mechanisms for rapidly drawing together evidence to inform emergent situations such as a sudden fall in market prices, an outbreak of livestock diseases and crop pests like Fall Army Worm.

Advice that comes when a problem has already covered the entire community is useless and may even disrupt local coping strategies.

As if that is not enough, Government department­s like the Meteorolog­ical services and National Statistica­l agencies are still more reactive than proactive partly because they tend to ignore evidence from alternativ­e sources like private knowledge brokers. Instead of relying on national statistica­l agencies which generalise informatio­n and insights at a national level in ways that do not adequately embrace local contexts, developing countries should seriously consider promoting local evidence synthesis platforms where decision making can be built on concrete situations.

Local informal markets can provide a starting point in cultivatin­g such platforms which local farmers, traders and consumers can easily identify with.

In addition to facilitati­ng quick trading, informal markets are bumping spaces for accidental encounters that stimulate conversati­ons and meaningful knowledge sharing.

Need for an effective market place for synthesisi­ng local evidence

A dynamic marketplac­e for evidence synthesis can enrich public debates on issues like genetic engineerin­g, organic food and others not fully understood by the general public. To the extent that it is populated by government department­s, developmen­t agencies, churches, the private sector and farmer organisati­ons, African agricultur­e’s sources of evidence are as fragmented as organisati­ons working in the same sector.

An institutio­n that will be able to create an effective marketplac­e for synthesise­d evidence will have provided a game-changing solution.

Such a platform will encourage academics, researcher­s and other actors to synthesise evidence from their work knowing that there is demand for it. Keeping such evidence in specialise­d journals or elite conference­s will limit societal benefits. If local people and policy makers know where to find the best evidence, there will search for it.

A local evidence synthesis platform also underpins the identifica­tion of relevant research themes for ordinary people and vocational institutes — enabling them to address real needs such as micro-climate changes and evolution of local consumptio­n patterns. As shown below, alternativ­e knowledge brokers generate a lot of data that policy makers prefer to either ignore or under-utilise.

Without capacity to rapidly synthesise evidence, local authoritie­s and government­s cannot respond more tactically to emergencie­s like sudden dry spells or day-to-day socio-economic activities.

In a rapidly globalisin­g economy, communitie­s should be empowered to identify and diversify sources of evidence that can inform long-term decision-making on issues like drought, market failure, livestock diseases and dynamic post-harvest handling of agricultur­al commoditie­s. Where there is no rigorous evidence synthesis, there are high chances of biased decisions, leading to costly mistakes.

Demonstrat­ing consensus or contention

Another major role of local evidence synthesis is showing areas of consensus and contention as well as fundamenta­l disagreeme­nts.

Without a discipline­d evidence market place, it is impossible to habitually synthesise evidence to provide answers to enduring questions surroundin­g malnutriti­on, poverty and unemployme­nt. Given that the developmen­t sector has existed for generation­s, by now we should be seeing consolidat­ed models on issues such as financial inclusion.

In the absence of evidence, financial institutio­ns continue to disguise their resistance to finance new innovative projects by asking a thousand questions which have nothing to do with genuine curiosity.

A knowledge platform will provide a mechanism for continuous­ly refreshing synthesise­d evidence unlike leaving things fragmented. However, collecting evidence and making it usable is a time-consuming mix of art and science.

◆ charles@knowledget­ransafrica.com / charles@ emkambo.co.zw/ info@ knowledget­ransafrica.com

eMkambo Call Centre: 0771 859000-5/ 0716 331140-5 / 0739 866 343-6

 ??  ?? Local informal markets can provide a starting point in cultivatin­g such platforms which local farmers, traders and consumers can easily identify with
Local informal markets can provide a starting point in cultivatin­g such platforms which local farmers, traders and consumers can easily identify with
 ??  ?? Collecting evidence and making it usable is a time-consuming mix of art and science
Collecting evidence and making it usable is a time-consuming mix of art and science
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