Growing export crops causes hunger – study
By Dennis Otim
21st Jan 2013:
Africa could reduce its poverty levels faster by focusing more on the production of staples rather than export crops, a study by the International Food Policy Research Institute (IFPRI) has revealed.
According to the UN news agency IRIN, the authors of the study (conducted in 10 countries south of the Sahara) found that “…producing more staple crops, such as maize, pulses and roots, and more livestock products tends to reduce poverty further than producing more export crops such as coffee or cut flowers.”
According to the study, while more public resources would be required to generate more agricultural growth, “…such public investment in staple sectors is probably cost effective”.
The authors argued that growth in the staple sector was more likely to benefit the poor than growth in the agricultural export sector.
Enoch Mwani, an agricultural economist at the University of Nairobi, concurred. “The agricultural export sector is generally associated with large corporations, but the poor rely predominantly on staples to survive.”
Mwani added that growth in staples had the effect of not only reducing poverty but also ensuring food security. “[Governments that] invest in staples have the opportunity to increase food availability and, at the same time, create wealth for smallholders,” Mwani told IRIN.
To spur development in sub-Saharan Africa, the study’s policy conclusions call for a focus on accelerating agricultural growth; promoting growth in large agricultural subsectors; supporting growth across several agricultural subsectors; and promoting growth in subsectors with strong linkages to the overall economy and the poor.
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