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Alternative visions for agricultural
growth in Africa: What should governments and markets do?
ODI, Tuesday 1 November 2005 5.006.00pm
Speakers: Andrew Dorward, Imperial-at-Wye, University
of London and Professor Thom Jayne, Michigan State University
Chair: Part1 - Colin Bradford, Governance Studies Program,
The Brookings Institute and Part 2 - Adrian Hewitt, Research Adviser
to APGOOD, ODI Research Fellow
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Audio (listen to the meeting)
Andrew
Dorward (part 1)
Andrew
Dorward (part 2)
Thom Jayne
Discussion
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download the correct version here
Presentations:
Andrew Dorward
Tom Jayne
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Now the pendulum had swung back, we have learned more over the
recent period, and there was a deeper and more African-focused vision
about what the private sector could effectively do, and its limits,
as well as where governments needed support. The speakers were then
presented, with Dorward introducing the broad statesand-markets
vision and Thom concentrating on donor support.
Andrew Dorward, after outlining the now familiar role of
agricultural development in economic growth and poverty alleviation,
stressed that farmers, and small farmers in particular, need access
to low-cost services and means of exchange if they are to play such
a role in pro-poor growth. This needs local coordination, which
is often absent owing to lack of resources, incentives and other
factors. (see his presentation)
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Moreover the challenges for African farmers are greater, Africa
not having had its Green revolution, suffering greater agro-climatic
vulnerability, weaker governance, poorer infrastructure, and smaller
firms as well as smaller, more landlocked economies (see also Paul
Colliers diagnosis in the first meeting of the series). These
factors combined with weak service delivery (public goods failures),
access to extension provisions (exclusion and discrimination), and
high transaction costs (or outright failures) led to a graphic agriculture
and market development poverty trap, involving farmers in considerable
risk if they opted for change and what seemed to the outside world
as the necessary transformation of their production.
The various phases of state-led agricultural and rural development
(demise circa 1980) and the over-corrective market-led agricultural
development of the era of liberalisation were then considered. Both
had their successes and failures, but the failure of the market-led
approach was particularly pertinent to staple crops. Here there
remained a strong case for intervention, if only because it would
be naïve to expect market entrepreneurs to take over consistently.
In fact, instead of dwelling on the history of failures, Dorward
enjoined us to identify and build on the successes in both state-led
and liberalisation measures.
He posed as the key question, what is necessary to escape
from the poverty trap? the answer being not just basic
profitability of production and marketing but also complementary
coordinated service provision and access, for which some non-market
coordination mechanisms were still needed. This was akin to the
analysis made and the services intended to be provided in the 1960s,
although of course the world economy which post-independence Africa
faced was somewhat different.
Nowadays the prescriptions would vary for different categories
of crops. For the traditional African export crops like tropical
beverages and cotton, the private sector can and does provide the
necessary coordination. For high value or specialist products, the
incentives may not however exist to support smallholders at the
same quality level, or at least to do this remuneratively. Staple
food crops however were really the problem for small farmers in
Africa particularly; liberalisation had largely failed to create
agricultural intensification and yet there was evidence of state
failure and neglect too.
Successes and failures need to be recognised pragmatically. Inconsistencies
needed to be avoided, eg between the short and the long term policies;
food security, poverty reduction and growth goals need to be nested;
and transitions need to be actively managed - there were lessons
for donors here too. There was a strong case for state support for
a mixed economy (though the sate itself needs to be pro-development
beforehand), within recognised limits (and the voice of producers
needed to be heard); monopolies could sometimes be managed benevolently
and so justified, but there were also roles for larger firms and
farmer/trader organisations to play.
Thom Jaynes presentation
focused on the form of donor support. After a preamble on the enormous
needs to address poverty alleviation in Africa, he outlined the
now dominant donor approach which he qualified also as substantial
which was predominantly to give untied budget
support to national treasuries in Africa, citing figures as high
as 85 per cent of the aid provided to Niger and 70 per cent to Mozambique
in the case of the World Bank and certain bilateral donors.
A survey of the literature of what was needed for long-term agricultural
and rural productivity growth which he presented however indicated
that it was agronomic research, education, good extension systems
availability, infrastructure and irrigation mostly requiring
public-good investments. However African governments not only devoted
small shares of the budgets to agriculture, when they did they rarely
addressed these fundamentals; instead they liked to pour money into
fertiliser subsidy and maize (staple food) marketing because of
its short-term political payoff. While 20 % of their budgets may
go on salaries, only 4% would go on extension services, etc. The
question was: should donors be supporting such a perversion
of policy with unconditional budgetary aid if it leads to misallocation
of resources for poverty alleviation? How could government
be otherwise forced to invest in political pay-offs five to ten
years down the line instead, critical for sustained poverty reduction
in the rural sector; thus how can the social trap of
short-term incentivisation be avoided?
(see: 'Does
General Budget Support Work? Evidence from Tanzania' by Andrew
Lawson, David Booth, Meleki Msuya, Samuel Wangwe and Tim Williamson,
July 2005)
The solution was to oblige governments to allocate more of their
resources (and present donor resources) into productive investments
which will help make markets work. To assist this, Jayne advocated
reallocating donor assistance away from what he called untied
budget support into funding specific productive investments like
crop science, extension services improvement, basic education, irrigation
and basic rural or rural-to-urban or to-port infrastructure.
Unless donor budgets were so allocated, he claimed, massive poverty
problems would be stored up for the future and we would see more
failed states in Africa. Donors should, he felt revert
exercising more influence over how their support is used.
There were six questions from the floor. Not everybody was convinced
that the short run wasnt important for farm families living
at the margins of existence, as well as for their votes. Farmers
themselves have acute knowledge of the need for risk avoidance and
should be consulted. Similarly we need to learn more from the small
successes of market-led development. Credit and appropriate inputs
ranked highly among these. Food aid was still pernicious in destroying
markets for farm staple production, without careful management.
There were appeals not to write off fertiliser subsidies in circumstances
of poor soil and even poorer farm families, and to reconsider abandoning
donor budget support, since the a priori assumption needed to be
that African governments, having the responsibility to spend their
own budgets, might know what is best for their people with external
funds too, having a stronger vested interest than donors. Arguably
too, African governments have longer-term time horizons than many
donor governments. A Somali questioner congratulated both presenters
on an impressive presentation and asserted that before independence,
Africa fed itself and so should be enabled to solve its problems
holistically now, especially now that the Cold War interlude was
over; one essential ingredient to be added to the lists deployed
by the speakers was good governance itself.
For further information, contact: Adrian
Hewitt, Research Adviser to the Group: Overseas Development
Institute, 111 Westminster Bridge Road, London SE1 7JD
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