000 04559nam a22004577a 4500
001 G77095
003 MX-TxCIM
005 20211006080815.0
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020 _a970-648-076-5
040 _aMX-TxCIM
072 0 _aA50
072 0 _aE14
082 0 4 _a338.91
_bWAT
100 1 _aEhui, S.
_uInternational conference on impacts of agricultural research and development: Why has impact assessment research not made more of a difference?
110 0 _aCentro Internacional de Mejoramiento de Maiz y Trigo (CIMMYT), Mexico DF (Mexico)
111 2 _aInternational Conference on Impacts of Agricultural Research and Development
_cSan José (Costa Rica)
_d4-7 Feb 2002
245 0 0 _aWhy has the green revolution passed by Sub-Saharan Africa?
260 _aMexico, DF (Mexico)
_bCIMMYT :
_c2003
300 _ap. 30
340 _aPrinted
500 _aAbstract only
520 _aAgriculture accounts for 17% of Sub-Saharan Africa's (SSA) gross domestic product (GDP), employs 67% of the total labor force and is the main source of livelihood for the region's poor. Therefore, agriculture remains important in rural SSA and indicators of rural well-being are closely related with agricultural performance. However, the Green Revolution that swept through Asia over the past 30 years failed in Africa. SSA's agricultural performance during the 1967-97 period was the worst in the developing world. Low productivity has seriously eroded the competitiveness of African agriculture in the world market. For example, Africa's share of total world agricultural trade fell from 8 percent in 1965 to 3 percent in 1996. The question asked by many, including policy makers, researchers, and development agencies, is why has agriculture in SSA performed so poorly over the past three decades while it has improved significantly in Asia, lifting many millions of people out of poverty? In this paper, we argue that the root causes of the poor agricultural performance in SSA rests mainly with poor development strategies-and policy choices. Although adverse resource endowments have also played a role, the overall unwillingness of many leaders to recognize the importance of agriculture to overall economic growth has been a major contributing factor. For many decades, policies continued to heavily tax agriculture through over-valued exchange rates and price- depressing interventions in food markets. Despite the very high tax levels, there has been very little investment of the surplus in rural public services and infrastructure. Subsidies for fertilizer and credit usually benefited larger, export-oriented farmers who are capable of exercising political power. Inefficient input markets and weak property rights have been major limiting factors for long-term entrepreneurial planning by undermining both the will and ability of farmers to invest. Unfortunately, poor domestic policies were reinforced by protectionist policies of the OECD countries. In addition to poor policies, conflict has also inhibited growth. Many countries, and often entire regions, are ravaged by wars. Lack of vision or effective governance by African leaders contributed to the deleterious situation. Consequently, rural incomes per capita have declined with negative consequences on poverty, food consumption and asset development. The outlook for the future is not bright; although total consumption of food will double by 2020, per capita consumption will only increase marginally. As with Asia, aggressive public investments in education, research and infrastructure (e.g. roads, irrigation) will be needed to sustain growth. In addition, policies must also reach out directly to the poor, particularly through investments in their human capital and health. Agricultural transformation in SSA will occur only if the countries in the region follow stable macroeconomic policies (market-friendly and open trade policies).
546 _aEnglish
591 _a0310|R01CIMPU|AGRIS 0301|AL-Economics Program
593 _aJuan Carlos Mendieta
595 _aCPC
650 1 0 _aAfrica
650 1 0 _aAgricultural products
650 1 0 _aAgricultural situation
650 1 0 _aDeveloping Countries
650 1 0 _aPerformance testing
650 1 7 _aPoverty
_gAGROVOC
_2
_91215
650 1 0 _aProductivity
_gAGROVOC
_91756
653 0 _aCIMMYT
700 1 _aBenin, S.,
_ecoaut.
700 1 _aPender, J.,
_ecoaut.
700 1 _aRosegrant, M.,
_ecoaut.
700 1 _9960
_aWatson, D.J.
_gResearch & Partnership Program
_8INT3479
_eed.
942 _cPRO
999 _c6844
_d6844