Leaping and Learning - making links from small farms to markets in Africa
A4I's Gordon Conway and Steve Wiggins, Overseas Development Institute, present some key findings from our joint Leaping & Learning research project.
Making links from small farms to markets in Africa: lessons from villages and supply chains
On Monday 25th February, Gordon Conway and Steve Wiggins - along with other guests and panellists - took part in a seminar at the Overseas Development Institute to explore the progress made on our joint Leaping & Learning project.
Smallholders dominate farming in Africa. But for many, productivity of land and labour is low, returns to farming are meagre, thus leaving them living in or close to poverty. Yet domestic and regional markets for food are growing. Technologies for higher productivity exist. But often farmers cannot get inputs, credit or insurance except at very high cost; cannot find ways to sell to the most rewarding outlets.
Creating better links between small-scale farmers and firms in the supply chain thus becomes a pressing issue for agricultural development in Africa.
Across the continent, groups of farmers, government agencies, private firms, and NGOs are trying to improve these links. Hundreds of trials, pilots, small programmes and initiatives exist. Moreover, at village level farmers individually and in groups try to find ways to make the links — and to make progress even when links are imperfect.
So what do we know of these experiences? What lessons are there for governments, donors and NGOs seeking to replicate initial successes and avoid pitfalls?
This event looked into these issues from two standpoints: the experience of small-scale farmers increasing their commercial production; and the lessons emerging from the many attempts to make better links between smallholders and others in the supply chains. It drew on the findings of research carried out by researchers in the Futures Agricultures Consortium as well as that carried out in the Leaping & Learning programme.
See the ODI website for further details
Outline of the meeting
14.00: Welcome and introductions
Chair: Gordon Conway (A4I) & Anna Locke (ODI)
14.15: Commercialisation of small-scale family farms: views from five sets of villages in Africa Steve Wiggins (ODI)
Chair: Gem Argwings-Kodhek (ACEF)
15.45: Linking smallholders to markets: lessons from the supply chains Steve Wiggins (ODI)
Chair: Barbara Adolph (IIED)
16.45: Panel: Key points, policy implications, further questions Christine Okali (FAC), Martin Evans (Agriprojects & Farm Africa), Bill Vorley (IIED) Chair: Nigel Harris (Farm Africa)
17.15: Concluding comments Anna Locke & Gordon Conway
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