The Zimbabwe Independent

New investment will give Africa the lead in agri-developmen­t

- Sola David-Borha and Linda Manda SOLA DAVID BORHA AND LINDA MANDA ARE SENIOR STANDARD BANK EXECUTIVES.

„ AT a time when the rest of the world is re-thinking its approach to commercial agricultur­e, Africa has a clear opportunit­y to refresh its approach to the sector and become an emerging force.

Big shifts are already happening in food production, land and water use, and the integratio­n of agri-tech and product tracing.

If African firms take an early lead during this transition, they will be well-placed to compete globally by building enduring assets and commercial advantages beyond primary production.

e financing of new investment­s in agricultur­e has always relied on a healthy financial ecosystem: active banks, sound insurers and lively futures markets.

e next set of gains will come from new platforms that allow small and large firms to connect to each other and to their shared stakeholde­rs. Reciprocal exchange of market data will make smaller, efficient players more visible to large buyers.

“Without continued advances in agricultur­al productivi­ty, the whole project of African advancemen­t is at risk,” according to Linda Manda, Sector Head Agribusine­ss, Corporate and Investment Banking at Stanbic Bank’s parent company, Standard Bank.

“e stakes are high for all of us”, says Manda, “because communitie­s in Africa rely on the agricultur­e industry for much more than food: employment, investment and infrastruc­ture developmen­t are all part of the deal.”

Over half (52%) of all people in SubSaharan Africa are employed in agricultur­e (2019).

Higher value incentives

ree recent developmen­t milestones suggest that African firms are ready to move beyond low-margin primary production while remaining active in agricultur­e.

According to Sola David-Borha, chief executive of Africa regions at Standard Bank, “higher-value economic activity is even more likely if finance, technology and trade move deeper into African agricultur­e. Larger and more open markets, strong supplier networks and technology investment­s will drive Africa’s growth.”

Trade data, and Standard Bank’s own long experience of trade finance, shows that Africa has been a net importer of food for almost two decades although the trade deficit has narrowed recently. Despite impressive export growth of certain key products, other food imports continue to rise.

e Covid-19-induced disruption to imports are a reminder that regional resilience in food supply is a practical imperative, not an intangible aspiration.

Open internal market in SSA

First, the African Continenta­l Free Trade Area (AfCFTA) should create a much larger internal market that gives producers access to a larger and more open market. Local production can better compete with the current import-and-distribute model.

Large-scale production will arise when the returns are not stifled by trade friction. As an African bank, Standard Bank’s role is to put our strong balance sheet to work, lending to the new crop of agri-entreprene­urs.

Multinatio­nals are already active crossborde­r distributo­rs, but we expect new

African producers to be attracted to the intra-African produce-to-trade and value addition opportunit­y.

Africa also needs to be ready for the next disruption in trade. Some global imports will always be required but it would be wise to ensure that key inputs can also be sourced regionally.

Distinctio­ns between suppliers

Second, the contrived distinctio­n between the produce of smallholde­r farmers and very large commercial producers is beginning to fade. e new financial platforms being offered by Standard Bank will confirm the extent which large and small farming operations can complement one another.

Outgrower programmes offered by large global firms allow smallholde­rs to establish themselves as suppliers to the biggest and most profitable value chains. Tobacco, sugar and sorghum are all good case studies.

Our banking platform is a place where buyers can meet producers, surrounded by market data on inputs, crop prices, volumes, regulation­s, trade advice and currency movements.

From the top of a tall grain silo, the neat polygons of monocrop plantation­s appear to be the only advanced outposts of progress.

By contrast, smallholde­r farmland can seem rough and rudimentar­y remnants of a pre-industrial age. Our own experience is quite different.

Smallholde­r farmers that have access to the right platforms and better yields are also able to compete on quality and cost. Local knowledge of weather, grains, indigenous varieties, insects, and soil has accumulate­d over many years in Africa and is becoming a treasure of indigenous competence and resourcefu­lness. e huge expansion of biological patents attests to the large commercial value of small, local insights.

Adoption of technology

e third recent milestone is the broad acceptance across Africa that advances in technology are not peripheral to growth. Grudging acceptance has given way to enthusiast­ic adoption.

Healthy livestock, fertile plantation­s, productive greenhouse­s and efficient cold chains all require technology partnershi­ps to keep them productive and profitable.

Two decades of smartphone penetratio­n in rural communitie­s has probably eased the transition from guesswork and speculatio­n to data-driven decisions and GPS mapping.

To make the most of this milestone, every hectare of land, every seedling and every bag of fertiliser must be used optimally. On-farm losses and unreliable methods are simply unaffordab­le during health pandemics and economic recessions.

Private investment in telecoms, machinery and pipelines will eventually work alongside publicly funded infrastruc­ture: roads, rail and bulk water supplies. Policy reforms need to support more public-private partnershi­ps that have shown they can build and maintain high-quality infrastruc­ture assets.

Consumer demand for less waste and more conservati­on will support investment­s in new systems that supply micro-nutrients to digitally-mapped crops and livestock.

Food-insecure communitie­s in Africa can cheer this developmen­t as much as time-starved households in wealthy countries: a regular surplus of well-priced food is the best guarantee of the social stability in which economic growth can best be cultivated.

 ??  ?? Smallholde­r farmers with access to the right platforms and better yields are able to compete on quality and cost.
Smallholde­r farmers with access to the right platforms and better yields are able to compete on quality and cost.

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