The African Green Revolution Forum (AGRF 2014) is kicking off in
Addis Ababa this week to present a major opportunity for interest groups to
engage each other on the vision for agriculture and food security on the continent.
Over 800 African Heads of States, Ministers and farmers will be discussing
and coordinating strategies for delivering the objective of Forum.
Ahead of the meeting, a leading African
agriculture research project argues that investment in smallholder farmers is
the key to African economic success over the next 20 years.
A
report title: “Farming and Africa’s Employment Challenge” authored by T.S.
Jayne, Milu Muyanga and Lulama Ndibongo Traub, suggests
that governments should make it their goal to invest in small farmers if they
want to see rapid economic growth in Sub-Saharan Africa.
The submissions are
produced below:
Africa’s Heads of State will
set off for the Green Revolution Forum in Ethiopia at the end of this month (August)
in order to consider ways to improve livelihoods in this 2014 “Year of
Agriculture”.
In preparation they would
be well placed to consider the following challenge: Over 350 million young
people will be entering the labor force in the next 20 years and even under the
most optimistic projections, only half of them will be absorbed into non-farm
wage jobs in Sub-Saharan Africa.
This means that farming
will need to employ at least a third of young Africans entering the labor force
until at least 2025. However, for agriculture to provide viable employment,
young people will require access to land.
Recent research
highlights the size of this challenge. Studies by Michigan State University,
the International Food Policy Research Institute (IFPRI), and several African
research organizations have concluded that 15 to 35 percent of the region’s
potentially available cropland has been acquired by large-scale foreign
investors. This figure excludes forestland. Roughly, a third of the region’s surplus
land is currently under forest cover.
The conversion of forests to cropland would entail major global environmental
costs.
While foreign ‘land
grabs’ have attracted media attention, perhaps a more serious threat is African
medium-scale investors, many of whom are relatively wealthy urbanites, have
acquired an even greater amount of land.
Moreover, 80% of Africa’s remaining arable land is highly concentrated
in just a few countries, many of which are fragile states.
Most governments’
existing strategies are officially oriented to promote agricultural
growth and food security for the millions of their rural constituents who are
small-scale farmers. And most of these strategies assume unhindered access to
land. However, there are increasing concerns that in reality these policies
are encouraging the transfer of land to medium- and large-scale interests
without due recognition of how this affects future generations of indigenous
rural communities to access land.
Africa
is not alone in trying to overcome these issues. Countries such as Japan and
South Korea were predominantly smallholder farming societies 60 years ago and
their economies now rely on manufacturing and technology.
In
these countries smallholder farmers increased their productivity and incomes
through good policies and public investments in infrastructure, agricultural
research and development and extension services, thereby supporting the demand
for non-farm businesses and the growth of employment opportunities off the
farm. Over time, most smallholder
farmers eventually moved into these non-farm jobs.
Some
commentators have concluded that African leaders should expedite the process by
giving up on the ‘romanticized’ vision of smallholder agriculture and favor
commercialized large-scale agriculture. But large-scale grain production is an extremely
weak employer of labor – about 1 worker per every 100 hectares cultivated --
and it pays little more than poverty wages.
While rural people might
wish to put down their hoes and walk into white collar office jobs tomorrow, a sober assessment
will acknowledge
that even in 2014, most African countries are inhabited mainly by unskilled and
semi-skilled rural people who are primarily engaged in farming. Their levels of
education and skills will prevent this from happening quickly.
Therefore,
if policy neglect or allocating the region’s prime land to outside interests
pushed rural people off their land, urban squalor and unemployment would only
be intensified – and would risk overwhelming governments’ capacity to cope with
it.
Africa’s
transformation from a primarily semi-subsistence, small-scale agrarian economy
to a more diversified and productive economy will still require unwavering
support to smallholder farmers so that they are able to participate in and
contribute to the region’s economic transition rather than be marginalized by
it.
While migration from
farm to non-farm sectors, and from rural to urban areas will provide the
brightest prospects for the transformation and modernization of Africa’s
economies, it will happen only as fast as educational advances and growth in
the non-farm job opportunities will allow, which in turn depend on income
growth among the millions of families still engaged in agriculture.
Government policies and
public investment policies are decisive, as these will determine the incentives
and scope for investment by the private sector, and will largely determine
whether the region’s economic transformation is a relatively smooth, robust and
peaceful process or a painful and protracted one.
It therefore in African leaders’
interests to protect the land rights of rural communities. Major
political risk can be avoided if land is made available for expansion of family
farming combined with more public investments and enabling policies. This will
determine whether a high proportion of young Africans are gainfully employed in
agriculture or join the ranks of the jobless.
End.
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