Hot, Hungry and Starved of Investment: Supporting Smallholders To Build A Climate-Resilient Agricultural Sector in Southern Africa
Hot, Hungry and Starved of Investment: Supporting Smallholders To Build A Climate-Resilient Agricultural Sector in Southern Africa
Hot, Hungry and Starved of Investment: Supporting Smallholders To Build A Climate-Resilient Agricultural Sector in Southern Africa
www.oxfam.org
WHAT IS AT STAKE LESSONS FROM
EL NIO
One of the strongest and most sustained El Nio events on record
exacerbated by climate change is causing severe drought, failed
harvests and a hunger crisis in southern Africa and Ethiopia. This El Nio
is being made worse by record high temperatures as a result of global
warming, with 2014 being the hottest year on record until 2015 exceeded
it. The trend is continuing, with 2016 set to be the hottest year yet.
2
Early outside help cannot be relied upon. The El Nio response has
demonstrated the challenge of mobilizing the international community
to respond in time. The drought and related food crisis were signalled
in advance, yet donors dragged their feet, ignoring the call for early
intervention despite the evidence that it saves both lives and money.
Failure to stem the crisis increases the burden on the worlds
humanitarian system which is becoming ever more strained by an
unprecedented number of global emergencies.
Sources: M. Mutamba et al. (2015). Beyond Good Intentions: Agricultural policy in the SADC
region. http://policy-practice.oxfam.org.uk/publications/beyond-good-intentions-agricultural-
policy-in-the-sadc-region-565759; World Bank. (2016). High and Dry: Climate change, water
and the economy. http://www.worldbank.org/en/topic/water/publication/high-and-dry-climate-
change-water-and-the-economy; FAO. (2011). The State of Food and Agriculture. 201011.
http://www.fao.org/docrep/013/i2050e/i2050e.pdf. Share of public spending on agriculture in
SADC countries is for 2014, available on p210 of: ReSAKSS. (2014). Beyond A Middle
Income Africa. http://www.resakss.org/sites/default/files/pdfs/ReSAKSS_AW_ATOR_
2014_WEB.pdf
3
AGRICULTURAL TRANSFORMATION TO
DATE A DECADE OF GOOD
INTENTIONS
Governments have made well-meaning commitments at African Union
(AU) and SADC level to prioritize the agricultural sector for support and
government funding. For example, the AU Malabo Declaration in 2014
reaffirmed an earlier commitment for African governments to spend at
least 10 percent of their public budgets on agricultural development. This
is based on the recognition that agriculture remains a critical driver of
inclusive growth, given the dominance of smallholder producers and the
importance of agriculture to GDP in many countries. Central to the
transformation of agriculture in the region is the need to urgently reverse
the undercapitalization of smallholder farming. Increasing governments
budgetary allocation to the sector is key as public spending is
recognized as the most direct and effective instruments that governments
can use to promote agricultural growth and poverty reduction in the
African context.
4
THE IMPORTANCE OF QUALITY
INVESTMENTS
While Malawi has consistently met the 10 percent target, and other
countries like Zambia and Zimbabwe have reported meeting it on
occasion, these countries focus a significant amount of their spending on
politically popular subsidies for low-value, climate-vulnerable maize. In
recent years, Zambia has spent approximately 80 percent of its
agricultural budget on subsidies for maize inputs and maize price
support.4 Malawis Farm Input Subsidy Programme (FISP) has been
known to consume roughly 70 percent of Malawis agricultural budget,
squeezing funding for other agricultural departments. The degree to
which these subsidies have reached and benefited the most vulnerable
has been disputed.5 Evidence suggests that smallholder farmers
especially women remain living in poverty and reliant on repeated
annual subsidies, becoming locked into producing low-value grains and
only a few becoming prosperous.6 This means that there is slow progress
in making farming into a business. While the Malawian FISP has
increased access to drought-tolerant maize varieties,7 there are more
effective ways of promoting this important technology.
5
However, this does not mean the private sector does not have a role to
play they do. Governments should incentivize responsible models of
private investment that are pro-smallholder, pro-women, and which
nurture, rather than undermine smallholder production, local markets and
small- and medium-sized enterprises. Supporting investment from
smallholders themselves, as well as cooperative groups should be
central to this vision.
In Paris, the world came together to agree a landmark climate deal, with
the goal of limiting global warming to 1.5C (we are currently on a
pathway to 2.7C).
The United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP) warns that the
developing world will face costs of adapting to climate change of up to
$500bn a year by 2050. Oxfam estimates that costs could be as high as
$790bn per year.
Maize, sorghum and millet will become more difficult to grow. One study
found that within the next decade many maize-growing areas in
southern Africa will be unsuitable for this staple crop on which
communities depend.
COP22 will take place in Morocco in November 2016. The Moroccan
environment minister, Hakima El Haite, has indicated that this will be the
Triple A COP, focusing on Africa, adaptation and agriculture.
Climate finance to help developing countries adapt to the impacts of
climate change was the unfinished business of Paris. Question marks
remain over how contributing countries will scale up funding to meet
escalating needs.
Total adaptation finance currently only amounts to $3 a year for each
poor farmer in the developing world.
6
THE EL NIO FOOD CRISIS MUST MARK
A DECISIVE SHIFT
The regional emergency has focused efforts and spurred SADC, national
governments and the international community to develop a longer-term
resilience strategy for the region as part of the response. It is clear that
we cannot continue with business as usual.
7
2. Resist the attraction of large-scale PPPs
8
of Land, Fisheries and Forests (VGGTs), the African Union Land Policy
Framework and the principles espoused in Free, Prior and Informed
Consent (FPIC) adopted by the World Bank, among others, offer useful
examples to guide these policies.
9
NOTES
1 SADC. (15 May 2016). SADC Regional Situation Update on El Nio-Induced Drought.
Retrieved 20 May 2016, from http://www.sadc.int/files/1714/6347/5407
/SADC_Regional_Situation_Update_1_El_nino_induced_Drought_as_at_15__May_
2016_Circulation_FINAL.pdf
2 OCHA. (14 April 2016). El Nio: Overview of impact, projected humanitarian needs
and response. Retrieved 20 May 2016, from http://reliefweb.int/report/world/el-ni-o-
overview-impact-projected-humanitarian-needs-and-response-14-april-2016. NB The
southern Africa region includes DRC.
3 J. Magrath. (2015). Entering Uncharted Waters: El Nio and the threat to food
security. Retrieved 20 May 2016, from http://policy-
practice.oxfam.org.uk/publications/entering-uncharted-waters-el-nio-and-the-threat-to-
food-security-578822
4 A.N. Kuteya et al. (2016). An In-depth Analysis of Zambia's Agricultural Budget:
Distributional effects and opportunity cost. Retrieved 20 May 2016, from
http://www.iapri.org.zm/news/item/773-our
5 A.R. Dorward and E. Chirwa. (2011). The Malawi Agricultural Subsidy Programme:
2005-6 to 2008-9. International Journal of Agricultural Sustainability, 9(1): 23247.
6 A.N. Kuteya et al. (2016). Op. cit.
7 M. Fisher et al. (2015). Drought Tolerant Maize for Farmer Adaptation to Drought in
Sub-Saharan Africa: Determinants of adoption in eastern and southern Africa.
Retrieved 20 May 2016, from http://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s10584-015-
1459-2
8 African Development Bank Group. (2015). African Development Bank to Triple Annual
Climate Financing to Nearly $5 billion by 2020. Retrieved 20 May 2016, from
http://www.afdb.org/en/news-and-events/article/african-development-bank-to-triple-
annual-climate-financing-to-nearly-5-billion-by-2020-14798/).
10
11
Oxfam International May 2016
This paper was written by Kiri Hanks. Oxfam acknowledges the assistance of Dailes
Judge, Robin Willoughby, Debbie Hillier and Tigere Chagutah in its production. It is part
of a series of papers written to inform public debate on development and humanitarian
policy issues.
For further information on the issues raised in this paper please email
[email protected]
This publication is copyright but the text may be used free of charge for the purposes of
advocacy, campaigning, education, and research, provided that the source is
acknowledged in full. The copyright holder requests that all such use be registered with
them for impact assessment purposes. For copying in any other circumstances, or for re-
use in other publications, or for translation or adaptation, permission must be secured
and a fee may be charged. Email [email protected].
OXFAM
Oxfam is an international confederation of 20 organizations networked together in more
than 90 countries, as part of a global movement for change, to build a future free from the
injustice of poverty. Please write to any of the agencies for further information, or visit
www.oxfam.org.
www.oxfam.org
12