Transcript Slide 1

PROMOTING AGRICULTURAL
DEVELOPMENT IN SUB SAHARAN
AFRICA TO ACHIEVE THE MILLENNIUM
DEVELOPMENT GOALS
Monty Jones,
Executive Director
UN presentation
Presentation Outline

Role of agriculture towards achievement of MDGs

Regional strategies and frameworks towards
reforming African agriculture to increase its
productivity thereby contributing to achievement of
the MDGs
CAADP,
 FAAP
 FARA and SROs


Conclusion
Performance of African agriculture
Cereal yields rose in all regions except Sub
Saharan Africa (SSA)
Indicators of agricultural
performance show
stagnation or decline in SSA
SSA registered lowest growth in agricultural value
added per agricultural population
LEGEND:
SSA – Sub Saharan Africa
SA – South Asia
EAP – East Asia and Pacific
MENA – Middle East and North Africa
LAC – Latin America and Caribbean
Source: World Bank (2007) World Development Report 2008
Role of agriculture towards achievement of MDGs in SSA
Goal
Role of Agriculture in SSA
1. Eradicating poverty and
hunger
Increase in agricultural productivity
and access to markets increases
income, food availability and reduces
food prices
7. Ensure environmental
sustainability
Practices that integrate sustainability;
Increased productivity curbs pressure
on sources of environmental services
2. Universal primary education
3. Empowerment of women
Improving agricultural practices to
relieve children, girls and women from
labour and drudgery
4. Reduction in child mortality,
5. Maternal health improvement
Raising incomes
6. Combating HIV/AIDS, malaria
+ other diseases
Enhancing food and nutrition security
Unless current
trends of
decline are
dramatically
reversed, SSA
is set to
become the
only region that
will fail to
achieve MDG
targets by 2015
Share of people living on less than US$1 a day (%)
SSA not likely to achieve MDG targets by 2015
Sub Saharan Africa
40
South Asia
30
MDG
Targets
East Asia and Pacific
20
10
Latin America & Caribbean
0
1990
1995
2000
2005
Source: (World Bank 2005)
2010
2015
The African vision by AU/NEPAD
Comprehensive Africa Agriculture
Development Programme (CAADP)
Regional agricultural production to
grow at an annual rate of 6% by 2015.





Dynamic agricultural markets among nations/region
Become a net exporter of agricultural products
Food available/affordable + equitable wealth distribution
Strategic player in agricultural S&T development
Sustainable use of natural resources
The CAADP Pillars
PILLAR 1
PILLAR 2
PILLAR 3
Extending the area
under sustainable
land and water
management
Improving rural
infrastructure and
trade-related capacities
for market access
Increasing food
supply and reducing
hunger
PILLAR 4
Agricultural research, technology dissemination & adoption
• Integrated natural resource management
• Adoptive management of appropriate germplasm
• Development of sustainable market chains
• Policies for sustainable agriculture
Each pillar has a lead institution responsible for developing a
framework (guidelines and principles for implementation)
The Framework for African Agricultural Productivity (FAAP)
1.
Systematic fragmentation among
innovation systems elements
•
Capacity weaknesses
•
Insufficient end-user
involvement
•
Ineffective farmer support
systems
2.
Fragmented external support
3.
Inadequate investment in ARD
CAADP
6% growth rate in agriculture
Prioritizes activities with the highest
potential to impact productivity, e.g.
4% growth rate in
agricultural productivity
Endorsed by African Heads of State and Government in June 2006
The FAAP process
Common understanding
of FAAP as a tool to:

Provide sound guidance for
overall direction of
agricultural productivity
interventions

Support processes that
steer institutions and
programs towards CAADP
vision

Advocate increased
political support, technical,
methodological support and
financial support
FAAP as a tool for promoting agricultural innovation
1. Evolution & reform of agricultural
institutions & services
Extension, research, training & education
farmer
FAAP interventions
National (e.g. Poverty Reduction Strategies)
- Response to market conditions and economic fluctuations
- Knowledge sharing, synergies & feedback mechanisms
- Stakeholder participation in decision making
Sub-regional
(e.g. WAAPP of West Africa)
-use of pluralistic model
- use principles of subsidiarity
- cost sharing to achieve economies of scale
- coordinated advocacy
Regional
(e.g. FARA regional initiatives)
-Advocacy for investments
-Partnership building
-Exchange of info & learning
Relationship of FARA and SROs to FAAP & CAADP
AU-NEPAD
SUB-REGIONAL
FAAP
 Evolution and reform of
agricultural institutions
and services
 Increasing the scale of
Africa’s agricultural
productivity investments
 Aligned and co-ordinated
financial support
SADC/FANR
CORAF/ WECARD
FARA
ASARECA
Pillar 4: Agricultural research
& technology dissemination
Pillar 3: Food supply
Pillar 2: Rural infrastructure
Pillar 1: Land management
CAADP
AARINENA
ORGANIZATIONS:
Strategic Plans
Operational Plans
Programmes
Projects
FARA’s Regional Initiatives
Network support
function
1. Advocacy and
resource
mobilisation
Initiative
Concept
FAAP
Framework to guide interventions
RAILS
Facilitate access to information and learning
DONATA
Dissemination of technologies
3. Regional policies
and markets
ABBI
Policies on emerging technologies
4. Capacity
strengthening
SCARDA
Institutional capacity development
BASIC
Building Africa’s capacity to build it’s own capacity
SSA-CP
Promoting innovation systems approach to research
PAEPARD
Inter-regional collaboration between Europe and Africa
2. Access to
knowledge and
technologies
5. Partnerships and
strategic alliances
Increasing investment in African agricultural productivity programs
SSA: Agricultural Research & Extension
(US$ Million / year)
3,500
3,000
2,500
What is required?
• Substantial increase in funding
from African governments
3,250
2,500
2,000
• G8 and associated development
agencies to honour
commitments to increase
support to African agriculture
1,500
1,000
500
500
250 250
25
0
Country
Sub-Regional
2005
Proposed
Global
10% Budget Allocation (2002-2004)
20
15
2002
2003
10
2004
Zimbabwe
Uganda
Tunisia
Tanzania
Swaziland
Sudan
Sierra Leone
Senegal
Niger
Mozambique
Mauritius
Kenya
Gambia
Gabon
Ethiopia
Chad
Cameroon
0
Burundi
5
Benin
Tracking progress
towards 10%
contribution of
national budgets
to agriculture
(2002-04)
% Allocated to Agric.
25
Harmonization of external funding support
Aims
1. Synchronization of support to avoid fragmentation
2. Enhancement of overall funding to national governments
3. Contribute towards comprehensive + sustained funding
Mechanisms
1. Shift from project support to a programmatic approach
2. Adoption of common processes
• Common financial management procedures, monitoring and
evaluation and reporting and review systems
3. Multi-donor trust funds or pooling of resources
Monitoring & Evaluation of FAAP


FAAP and CAADP review process

To be undertaken in year 2010 and 2015

To cover status of agricultural innovation across the continent
FAAP monitoring and evaluation

Investments in agricultural research and dissemination systems

Trends in value of agricultural production, productivity, trade

Trends in farmer income and poverty measures

Indicators of institutional capacity and reform

Number and area under new technologies

Number of farmers, processors and others adopting the new
technologies

Policy, strategies and programs in place

Number of donors coordinating and harmonizing support under FAAP
Conclusion

Agriculture is a fundamental instrument for achieving
broad-based development in Africa and the MDGs

A Vision and Framework for increasing agricultural
productivity (CAADP & FAAP) are in place and have
received endorsement at the highest political level.

We now need to speed up their implementation; a
collective task for national, regional and international
actors

Africa may not realise the MDGs by the target date of
2015, but with concerted effort towards the Vision it can
achieve them within the lifetimes of our children!!