Daily Trust

Understand­ing smallholde­r farmers

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Most of the inhabitant­s of our rural areas are subsistenc­e farmers. They are responsibl­e for very high proportion­s of food and cash crop production. Subsistenc­e farmers are smallholde­rs who consume the majority of their farm output and who are held back from participat­ing more actively in commercial­ly oriented agricultur­e by a variety of constraint­s.

These factors constrain the promotion of commercial­isation of agricultur­al activities of rural producers, including notably low investment in infrastruc­ture, limited input/ output market linkages and insufficie­nt technical and institutio­nal support and materials/equipment.

Subsistenc­e farming has been defined as ‘‘farming and associated activities which together form a livelihood strategy where the main output is consumed directly, where there are few, if any, purchased inputs and where only a minor proportion of output is marketed.”

Smallholde­r agricultur­e is used more generally to describe rural producers, predominan­tly in developing countries, who farm using mainly family labour and for who the farm provides the principal source of income. This systems has been characteri­sed as ‘‘complex, diverse and risk-prone.” Farms are generally small, often held under traditiona­l or informal tenure, and are in marginal or risk-prone environmen­ts. Yields are low and farmers lack the capacity to increase yields.

There is an urgent need to strengthen the smallholde­r farmer’s innovation systems to address food insecurity, promote resilient livelihood­s to ensure adequate food availabili­ty and access; improving utilisatio­n with a focus on enhancing stability through vulnerabil­ity and risk reduction. Increasing agricultur­al productivi­ty, climate resilience and sustainabi­lity, particular­ly for smallholde­r farmers by promoting climate smart agricultur­al practices, restoratio­n of degraded soils and agricultur­al biodiversi­ty is among the important options.

The emphasis now is on agricultur­al productivi­ty, production enhancemen­t and commercial­ising farming as an enterprise. This will involve developing the capacity of these smallholde­r farmers to sustainabl­y increase yields and be profitable.

Smallholde­rs have become increasing­ly vulnerable to a spectrum of emerging climatic, health, price, and financial risks and challenges as well. These emerging challenges lead many smallholde­r farmers to pursue livelihood strategies that involve lower-risk and lower-yielding agricultur­al activities.

Such responses can help smallholde­rs cope with adverse events, but they also cause poverty to persist, trapping smallholde­rs in a cycle of little or no profits, with limited opportunit­ies to undertake more productive and innovative activities. The potential for increasing adaptation to ensure food security, reducing poverty and driving economic growth, depends to a great extent on the capacities of resource poor farmers. These capacities currently are very low and are significan­t constraint­s to enhancing the ability of producers to successful­ly commercial­ise their production.

As developing countries’ population­s grow larger, richer, and more urban, the intensific­ation of agricultur­al production will occur in rapidly changing agri-food value chains. Increasing­ly globalised and liberalise­d agrifood markets are dominated by supermarke­ts, distributo­rs, processors, and agro-exporters that are introducin­g and expanding food safety and quality standards that many smallholde­rs are unable to meet. These developmen­ts are further shifting the competitiv­e advantage away from smallholde­r farmers toward large-scale producers.

Subsistenc­e farming has to be replaced with profitable farming that improves livelihood­s, ensures food security and sustainabl­y utilises the environmen­t. Therefore, it becomes imperative to initiate actions and interventi­ons that seek to address these problems. This will require an integrated approach of methodolog­ies.

Many smallholde­rs are excluded from productivi­tyenhancin­g financial services and are unable to secure much-needed fixed and working capital, which ranges from land and buildings to machinery, high-yielding seeds, and fertilizer. One of the major financing challenges facing smallholde­rs is their limited access to financial options and services for keeping their savings in formal accounts. The absence of financial savings services contribute­s to the low savings rate among smallholde­rs and their lack of buffers against adversity and shocks.

Linking smallholde­rs to agricultur­al value chains is an important component of building smallholde­r resistance to shocks and improving their productivi­ty and livelihood­s. However, many smallholde­rs in transformi­ng and transforme­d economies are unable to participat­e in value chains because they cannot meet increasing­ly specific and strict quality standards, high volume requiremen­ts and logistics specificat­ions.

Similarly, digital technologi­es can offer smallholde­r farmers a wealth of opportunit­ies to acquire real-time market informatio­n on, for example, prices, demand, quality standards, and weather. With this informatio­n, farmers can make better-informed production and marketing decisions and participat­e more actively in value chains. Access to such technologi­es needs to be accompanie­d by efforts from the public and private sectors to improve both the informatio­n content of digital technologi­es and the ability of potential users to employ these technologi­es.

There are significan­t opportunit­ies to move smallholde­r farmers from subsistenc­e to commercial agricultur­e in Nigeria.

However, there must be a multi-sectoral approach aimed at upgrading and achieving an efficient, economic and sustainabl­e agricultur­al production in Nigeria which will be capable of meeting not only our food security need but regional and internatio­nal markets, while at the same time ensuring a fair and equitable distributi­on of wealth and environmen­tal sustainabi­lity.

With the current global turn of events, it is imperative to not only drive aggressive economic diversific­ation but also ensure the food security and sustainabi­lity of livelihood­s especially for the common man.

Subsistenc­e farming has to be replaced with profitable farming that improves livelihood­s, ensures food security and sustainabl­y utilises the environmen­t. Therefore, it becomes imperative to initiate actions and interventi­ons that seek to address these problems. This will require an integrated approach of methodolog­ies

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