Big money is going into agriculture in developing countries. Governments, development banks, donor agencies and major private foundations are ploughing in cash in a bid to guarantee food security in traditionally challenged areas, and to boost the resilience of smallholders in the face of the ever-increasing impacts of climate change.
Sums being made available include $6.6bn through the United States Feed the Future programme and $24bn for African agricultural transformation through the African Development Bank. Private foundations that have made pledges include the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation and the Rockefeller Foundation.
This money underpins strategies to increase the incomes of smallholders and to boost their productivity and improve distribution systems so that nutrition in developing countries improves overall. “Unprecedented” progress in these areas means that “for the first time in human history, the end of hunger, under-nutrition and extreme poverty is within our grasp,”
according to a new report from Feed the Future.
Spending power?
It all sounds good. But the availability of heavyweight financial resources for agricultural development has created its own problem: how best to deploy the money at large scale so that an enduring transformation can be achieved.
Engaging with smallholders requires several levels of partnership, and the private sector must be involved. To thrive, smallholders need what the private sector can provide in terms of financing, access to markets and tools to boost their productivity.
But partnerships are not necessarily easy. There is still a “struggle to find the right model,” says Kavita Prakash-Mani, executive director of
Grow Asia, which works on sustainable agriculture partnerships.
The key, she argues, is that there needs to be an “independent honest broker in the middle” who can represent the interests of smallholders and speak effectively to companies and development organisations.
The broker approach
Such an approach can resolve a number of difficulties: providing an interface between companies and smallholders, and between companies and donor agencies, which might be wary of providing development funds to companies directly. Honest brokers can also mediate finance for farmers. Lenders could deal with smallholders directly but perceive them as high risk.
Development expert Dr Peter Davis from Consilience Global says what’s important is recognising that “there are things that donors are better placed to do and things that companies are better placed to do”. Davis argues that there is “a lot of talk about partnerships and stakeholder relationships without a real understanding of who’s best placed to do what”.
But brokerage models are tricky to implement and have only been established to a limited extent so far. To manage the funds being put into sustainable agriculture, their capacity needs to be dramatically increased – Grow Asia, for example, has a full-time staff of just seven.
Pre-competitive struggle
In addition, companies might struggle with the pre-competitive nature of such arrangements, including shared control and unpredictable outcomes – companies might put resources into a smallholder development project, for example, but not reap all the benefits if the smallholders have the flexibility to sell to multiple firms.
There might also be challenges in dealing with the authorities. A recent
Oxfam briefing on maize markets in southern Africa, for example, notes there is mutual distrust between governments and traders at all levels. Because of the importance of maize as a staple in the region, it can in fact become a political tool; its supply and demand “manipulated to burnish political reputations and garner votes”. Authorities might resent any initiative that could be seen as undermining their control.
So, while big cash commitments for sustainable agricultural development in poor countries are going to bring development benefits, more money brings changing risks, inevitably, for big business, smallholders and their partners. As Peter Davis points out: “Investment on its own doesn’t solve the problem. It’s what we do with it that counts, and while progress is being made, we still don’t seem to have worked out yet that the right solutions are rarely the easy ones.”