Challenges facing African agriculture

At independence in 1960, Africa was a modest food exporter while Asia was engulfed in a food crisis. The Green Revolution boosted food production in Asia and the global food problem shifted to Africa. However, science and technology have been promoted on an ad hoc basis in Africa's 45 years of indep...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Babu, Suresh Chandra, Anandajayasekeram, P., Rukuni, M.
Formato: Capítulo de libro
Lenguaje:Inglés
Publicado: CAB International 2007
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/50262
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author Babu, Suresh Chandra
Anandajayasekeram, P.
Rukuni, M.
author_browse Anandajayasekeram, P.
Babu, Suresh Chandra
Rukuni, M.
author_facet Babu, Suresh Chandra
Anandajayasekeram, P.
Rukuni, M.
author_sort Babu, Suresh Chandra
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description At independence in 1960, Africa was a modest food exporter while Asia was engulfed in a food crisis. The Green Revolution boosted food production in Asia and the global food problem shifted to Africa. However, science and technology have been promoted on an ad hoc basis in Africa's 45 years of independence. This chapter analyses why the Asian Green Revolution failed to take root in Africa, and why the average African grain yield has been flat since 1960. The chapter shows that the rate of return has been high on investments in research for a few commodities, such as hybrid maize, rice and flowers. However, most countries in Africa have a weak scientific and institutional foundation for transforming agriculture. Long-term investments are required to build the scientific and institutional foundation for a modern agriculture. This is a tall order, but this is what the USA accomplished from 1860 to 1912, what Japan did from 1868 to 1914 and what many countries in Asia and Latin America have accomplished over the past 40 years. The challenge now is to mobilize African political leaders and donors to make long-term accretionary (step by step) investments in science and technology that will boost cereal yields, increase agricultural productivity and drive down real (inflation adjusted) food prices. This is a proven way to reduce urban poverty and the poverty of rural families who are net food buyers. This book brings together empirical evidence from 20 studies on the impact of investments in agricultural research and food security in Africa. Information on the returns to investments in research can help countries in setting priorities for agricultural research. The purpose of this chapter is to highlight the emerging issues, challenges and constraints on African agriculture that beg serious attention from the policy makers. It enumerates a broad set of food security challenges facing African agriculture. Finally, it identifies successes in African agriculture and recent efforts aimed at scaling-up the successes.
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spelling CGSpace502622025-03-21T20:56:45Z Challenges facing African agriculture Babu, Suresh Chandra Anandajayasekeram, P. Rukuni, M. agriculture agricultural development small farms productivity technology diffusion of research [technology transfer] natural resources resource depletion water management marketing techniques trade liberalization domestic markets leadership At independence in 1960, Africa was a modest food exporter while Asia was engulfed in a food crisis. The Green Revolution boosted food production in Asia and the global food problem shifted to Africa. However, science and technology have been promoted on an ad hoc basis in Africa's 45 years of independence. This chapter analyses why the Asian Green Revolution failed to take root in Africa, and why the average African grain yield has been flat since 1960. The chapter shows that the rate of return has been high on investments in research for a few commodities, such as hybrid maize, rice and flowers. However, most countries in Africa have a weak scientific and institutional foundation for transforming agriculture. Long-term investments are required to build the scientific and institutional foundation for a modern agriculture. This is a tall order, but this is what the USA accomplished from 1860 to 1912, what Japan did from 1868 to 1914 and what many countries in Asia and Latin America have accomplished over the past 40 years. The challenge now is to mobilize African political leaders and donors to make long-term accretionary (step by step) investments in science and technology that will boost cereal yields, increase agricultural productivity and drive down real (inflation adjusted) food prices. This is a proven way to reduce urban poverty and the poverty of rural families who are net food buyers. This book brings together empirical evidence from 20 studies on the impact of investments in agricultural research and food security in Africa. Information on the returns to investments in research can help countries in setting priorities for agricultural research. The purpose of this chapter is to highlight the emerging issues, challenges and constraints on African agriculture that beg serious attention from the policy makers. It enumerates a broad set of food security challenges facing African agriculture. Finally, it identifies successes in African agriculture and recent efforts aimed at scaling-up the successes. 2007 2014-10-31T06:08:59Z 2014-10-31T06:08:59Z Book Chapter https://hdl.handle.net/10568/50262 en Open Access CAB International
spellingShingle agriculture
agricultural development
small farms
productivity
technology
diffusion of research [technology transfer]
natural resources
resource depletion
water management
marketing techniques
trade liberalization
domestic markets
leadership
Babu, Suresh Chandra
Anandajayasekeram, P.
Rukuni, M.
Challenges facing African agriculture
title Challenges facing African agriculture
title_full Challenges facing African agriculture
title_fullStr Challenges facing African agriculture
title_full_unstemmed Challenges facing African agriculture
title_short Challenges facing African agriculture
title_sort challenges facing african agriculture
topic agriculture
agricultural development
small farms
productivity
technology
diffusion of research [technology transfer]
natural resources
resource depletion
water management
marketing techniques
trade liberalization
domestic markets
leadership
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/50262
work_keys_str_mv AT babusureshchandra challengesfacingafricanagriculture
AT anandajayasekeramp challengesfacingafricanagriculture
AT rukunim challengesfacingafricanagriculture