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Risk management for family agriculture: An ECART Development Programme Gideon Onumah and Guy Poulter Natural Resources Institute. WHY IS THIS ISSUE RELEVANT?. Need to raise global agricultural output is crucial and urgent because issues such as :. Global food crisis
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Risk management for family agriculture: An ECART Development Programme Gideon Onumah and Guy Poulter Natural Resources Institute
Need to raise global agricultural output is crucial and urgent because issues such as : • Global food crisis • Potential for global hunger • Adverse effects of climate change • Demand for raw material for bio-fuels.
Smallholder farmers in developing countries are strategically important because: • They dominate farm sector in developing countries (over 2.5 billion people involved) • Improved sector performance has statistically significant poverty reduction impact
Smallholder farmers face production and post harvest risks • When unfavourable natural factors e.g. drought, flood, disease, pests, depletion of soil fertility etc lead to reduced output, smallholders lose (“tails”) • When favourable natural factors lead to good production but markets are inaccessible and/or prices are volatile, smallholder are unable to sell their product and also lose (“heads”)
Key to helping smallholder farmers is understanding their ability to manage risk
Production problems constrain yield • Public/donor investment in research has declined limiting availability of better performing crop varieties and livestock breed. • Yield-enhancing farm inputs and improved crops and livestock not affordable to smallholders. • Poor provision of extension and veterinary services. • Single-farm irrigation technology unaffordable and public investment in irrigation declining.
Problems with marketing systems accentuate post-harvest risks Marketing systems constrained by lackof - Basic transport and storage infrastructure • Reliable market information systems • Standard measures and grading systems • Modern market institutions that facilitate impersonal trade • Trade finance for effective inventory management • Stable, trade-friendly policies and regulations
Limited options for managing risks • Risk sharing options are severely under-developed (e.g. contract farming and forward contracts) • Markets for risk transfer are absent (e.g. crop and livestock insurance and hedging instruments) • Formal coping systems also absent (e.g. welfare transfers) Consequence • Households adopt risk minimising strategies • Low yield but more tolerant crops, mixed farming, crop • rotation • Leading to slow growth in agricultural output and productivity.
Programme objectives To improve welfare of smallholders by increasing access to effective toolsfor managing farm risks, through: • Identifying, improving, replicating and/or promoting effective/feasible tools • Fostering dialogue to ensure supportive policy and regulatory framework • Encouraging lesson learning.
Programme approach • Holistic: - focus not only on mitigating individual but also inter-related risks • Contextualise lessons: - understand context within which particular systems succeed • Inductive:- derive over-aching insights from different cases • Ensure effective stakeholder engagement (from beginning) • Focus:- developing countries (especially Africa) but lessons from Europe, America and elsewhere
Phase I (Inception and Scoping) • Key outputs include: • Stakeholder mapping • Inventory of farm risk management tools based on desk-based papers (produced by ECART members and others) • In-depth studies of selected tools leading to synthesis of feasible options • Dissemination of feasible options • Adoption of framework for selecting countries for Phase II.
Phase II (Innovation/Validation) • The key activities include: • Selecting four participating countries from Africa, Asia and South America • Agree plans for developing or strengthening accessible risk management systems • Implement plans agreed with national stakeholders • Monitor, evaluate and share lessons from country experiences
Progress to date • Identification Fiche submitted to EC • Likely funding in 2009 • Consultations ongoing with Agence Francaise de Developpement and Ministere des Affaires Etrangeres et Europeenes on support for research and development of post-harvest risk management tools/systems • Work likely to be undertaken in first half of 2009. • Further funding need!