Smallholders and rural people: Making food system value chains inclusive

Smallholders often struggle to connect with actors in the middle of the food supply chain as a result of limited access to land and inputs and lack of capacity to scale up or implement new practices. KEY FINDINGS - Propelled by urbanization, rising incomes, and changing diets, food markets are expan...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Vos, Rob, Cattaneo, Andrea
Format: Book Chapter
Language:Inglés
Published: International Food Policy Research Institute 2020
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/143325
Description
Summary:Smallholders often struggle to connect with actors in the middle of the food supply chain as a result of limited access to land and inputs and lack of capacity to scale up or implement new practices. KEY FINDINGS - Propelled by urbanization, rising incomes, and changing diets, food markets are expanding in Africa and South Asia, creating enormous potential for job and income opportunities along food supply chains. - Small and medium-sized enterprises have prolifer-ated in storage, logistics, transportation, and wholesale and retail distribution to meet growing rural and urban food demands. This so-called quiet revolution appears to be taking place out of sight of policymakers, leaving much of the potential for inclusive value-chain develop-ment untapped. - Smallholders often struggle to connect with actors in the middle of the food supply chain as a result of lim-ited access to land and inputs and lack of capacity to scale up or implement new practices to meet qual-ity requirements. - Lack of infrastructure and skills is holding back the devel-opment of food supply chains in low-income Africa and Asia, especially where the potential is greatest: in small towns and intermediate cities near rural farmlands.