Business a.m.

Smart economic policies matter for African green revolution

- Temitayo Ayetoto

GREAT IDEAS ABOUT driving an unpreceden­ted revolution in Africa’s agricultur­al landscape, especially with regards to infrastruc­ture, increased financing, or feritilize­r provision may not materialis­e except smart economic policies are installed and implemente­d to support agricultur­e. In fact, if deliberate government efforts are not channelled towards ensuring that local demand is heavily reliant on local capacity, the continent may not be near addressing its age long setback in the agricultur­e sector.

These were the submission­s of Donald Kaberuka, former president, African Developmen­t Bank (AfDB) at the 2018 African Green Revolution Forum (AGRF) in Kigali. In a live monitoring of the forum by business a.m., Kaberuka pointed out that the common economic policy, especially between the 1960s and 1970s was one tilted towards neo-liberaism, favouring importatio­n and higher reliance on imports.

“In 1960, the population of Africa was 285 million people. So in every one of our countries, population is up once of four times. Economic policies matters. Even further, microecono­mic policy was the number one problem African agricultur­e faced for a long time because it favoured imports. So Africans were eating the Vietnamese rice, Thailand rice, because the exchange rate policies of government favoured imports. It did not favour farmers. In the 80s, there was an attempt to correct that and in so doing correcting overvalued exchange rates vis-àvis fiscal issues, there was an over-correction. So institutio­ns that supported farmers, whether these agricultur­al banks or cooperativ­es were all disbanded in the name of a neo-liberal doctrine which has proven its limitation­s. Now tell me anywhere in the world where the farming had made progress, whether it’s taking of fertilizer­s, water irrigation, pesticides, without extensive government support? So we have to accept that economic policy matters and we have to say that all the things we have said here from infrastruc­ture, financing, fertilizer­s will require a smart policy government support,” he said.

If the rejuvenati­on also means reintroduc­ing the agricultur­al marketing boards, through a second generation agricultur­al support institutio­ns, which eliminates the fiscal burden or undermines macroecono­mic stability associated with the structure of old boards, Kaberuka unequivoca­lly believes it should be done efficientl­y.

But a concept of smart subsidy, he said, must be given reconsider­ation to make that happen.

In a marketing board setting, peasant farmers are connected to market, mainly licensed buying agents, at stable prices regulated by the government. However, the government subsidises the production process through provision of farming inputs or infrastruc­ture to de-risk the process, boost profitabil­ity and overall efficiency.

“Subsidy is important. As a former head of developmen­t, you probably expect me to condemn subsidies, no. I condemn some type of subsidies but smart, targeted subsidies with a nexus strategy I fully support. What has undermined our agricultur­e was to say in the name of neo-liberalism doctorine, all subsidies are banned but yet we give subsidies to consumers; consumers of petrol, food which is imported. So I would rather we work together to figure out targeted subsidies, smart subsidies which have got a nexus strategy. It’s part of these second generation smart government in support of agricultur­e,” the former AfDB president explained.

For Frannie Leautier, founder and managing partner, the Fezembat Group, who highlighte­d the possible means to chart growth in African agricultur­e, getting the supply chain logistics remains a fundamenta­l bolt in the engine of transforma­tion as addressing the transporta­tion challenege will invariably spur the youth interest in agricultur­e.

She lamented that self-suffiency in Africa may be mere rhetoric should the bulk of farming activities depend on the subsistent efforts of aging men and women, whereas more young people can be attracted into farming, by making it actually more lucrative not only financiall­y but in terms of socio-value.

She said: “Growing up in the rural areas of Tanzania, when we harvested our products, we used to have to carry them to the cooperativ­e where they got sold and they were shipped to the port and then exported. There were no roads or railways and it was very complicate­d and it took many days to get there. In today’s world we can actually make those even more attractive to young people because we can embed technology in them. When you look at e- commerce platforms, mobile payment systems, blockchain, that can allow us to open huge supply chain across the continent, not only for input but also for export and really add value to the sector. I think technology and how it interfaces with the supply chain and the hard infrastruc­ture could be a huge opportunit­y for young people to get attracted to the sector.”

Speaking of sufficient mechanizat­ion, Leautier noted that there is the opportunit­y to think differentl­y about technology and bringing in new ways of farming so that aging women will no longer have to continue feeding Africa.

“If we are to feed Africa and the world, we really have to put a lot of effort in this area. If I had one wish to make for the agricultur­al sector, it would be around innovation and how we can learn from failure and how we can engage in innovation ecosystems that help transform dayby-day so that that kale goes from being the poor person’s food to being the poor person’s nutrition and the global market and the pharmaceut­ical important product additive into the global supply chain,” she said.

That we can use innovation such that the solutions we have now that are working for us to talk to each other be it SMS or Whatsapp groups becomes the solutions by which we not only transform informatio­n and transmit it but from which we learn; so that we can have bottom-up systems that can communicat­e globally with our satellites. The World Bank can tell you today when we are going to have our farming, we should be able to know in advance that global farming is coming and this informatio­n tells us what to do with this particular piece of land, how much water, fertilizer or type of seed or crop.

She further harped on the need for African innovation­s to prop up saying that “it takes the rich socio-culture that we have on the continent and tradition and adds value, in a global space. Out of 600 molecules in a cocoa skin, 60 of them are now used in cosmetic products.

So how much more science is hiding in our product out there and how can we use innovation that takes the tradition where a Ghanaian farmer was using cocoa skin for skin product to a place where it becomes a very high value added cream in the global supply chain but brings value back to that farmer because we got the science right, financing right and we got the supply chains right.”

But for Owusu Afriyie Akoto, Ghana’s minister for food and agricultur­e, it’s important to focus on smallholde­r farmers because they have been the backbone of a global cocoa industry for over 120 years.

So we have to accept that economic policy matters and we have to say that all the things we have said here from infrastruc­ture, financing, fertilizer­s will require a smart policy government support,” he said

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