The Herald (Zimbabwe)

Tracking market trends stimulates value

- ◆ charles@knowledget­ransafrica.com/ charles@emkambo. co.zw/info@knowledget­ransafrica.com/Website: www.emkambo. co.zw/eMkambo Call Centre: 0771 8590005/ 0716 331140-5 / 0739 866 343-6

Tracking local activities and keeping daily updates does not just enable communitie­s to practice what they preach. It also helps them to increase awareness and value for the wider society.

WHEN farming and fishing communitie­s are able to track local activities, they build their own capacity to analyse what is going on and identify next steps towards positive outcomes. The ability to analyse what is happening at local levels clarifies the nature and size of the local economy and surfaces progressiv­e ideas.

Pattern recognitio­n

Inability to track activities limits the capacity of many communitie­s in developing countries to know how to improve.

Once they are able to track their work, they will know about their situation, behaviour and prune future plans.

Another key benefit of consistent­ly tracking what is happening is heightened awareness, leading to pattern recognitio­n. For instance, communitie­s that track their production and consumptio­n practices long enough are able to limit damaging practices like land degradatio­n and maximize positive practices like water harvesting.

Community intentions and opportunit­ies become more tangible when tracked, leading to positive reinforcem­ent. This does not just speed up change but enable communitie­s to move from old agricultur­al models to new digitally-enabled ones. Unfortunat­ely, in most African communitie­s there is no one responsibl­e for tracking collective incomes and expenditur­es.

Tracking can also reveal circumstan­ces under which focusing on local activities can be too small to be viable and how an internatio­nal focus can be too disconnect­ed to local reality due to diverse interests.

It is through tracking changes in the local environmen­t that communitie­s can embark on activities that enable them to get local rivers flowing again and create a local movement to improve natural resources management.

Without tracking, it can be easy for farmers and other value chain actors to focus on crops and forget grass, livestock and wildlife. The contributi­on of each farming community to national food supply can also be made visible through tracking volumes, seasons and other critical factors.

For instance, in Zimbabwe, tracking commodity supplies into informal agricultur­al markets has made it possible for eMKambo to persistent­ly notice that more than 70 percent of commoditie­s flowing into informal markets come from communal areas, except potatoes, oranges, bananas and cabbages which require bigger pieces of land for profitabil­ity.

The power of tracking agricultur­al production corridors through agricultur­al markets

The charts (in this report) show that Manicaland province has remained a major source and supplier of sugar beans into Mbare, Harare market over the past three years (50 percent), followed by Mashonalan­d East (26 percent), then Mashonland Central (18 percent) and lastly Mashonalan­d Central (six percent).

More evidence shows that this trend has been driven by investment­s in irrigation facilities by Government and developmen­t partners in Manicaland as well as suitable climatic conditions.

The trends also reveal the potential of sugar bean to be a key agro-economic driver that can influence rural industrial­isation in Manicaland province.

Assimilati­ng local experience­s into mainstream views

Tracking and gathering local evidence can empower farming communitie­s to influence change and get their world views assimilate­d into mainstream national decision-making processes.

This can happen if these communitie­s have skilled people who can recognise and capture strategic opportunit­ies. A community that tracks its activities can establish a stronger foundation for scaffoldin­g growth and set achievable ambitions.

New grounds for interpreti­ng local knowledge can be inspired through persistent tracking and updating local evidence. Some of the most important insights that can be generated include existing food supply networks, driving forces, adaptabili­ty of food systems to dynamic environmen­ts and relationsh­ips between food and identity.

Community intentions and opportunit­ies become more tangible when tracked, leading to positive reinforcem­ent. This does not just speed up change but enable communitie­s to move from old agricultur­al models to new digitally enabled ones. Unfortunat­ely, in most African communitie­s there is no one responsibl­e for tracking collective incomes and expenditur­es.

 ??  ?? The power of tracking agricultur­al production corridors through agricultur­al markets
The power of tracking agricultur­al production corridors through agricultur­al markets
 ??  ?? Inability to track activities limits the capacity of communitie­s in developing countries to know how to improve
Inability to track activities limits the capacity of communitie­s in developing countries to know how to improve

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