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For the first time since record keeping began in the 1960s, per
capita food production in sub-Saharan Africa is beginning to rise.
According to the World Bank's World Development Report 2007,
"agricultural growth in sub-Saharan Africa has accelerated
from 2.3 percent per year in the 1980s to 3.3 percent in the 1990s
and to 3.8 percent per year between 2000 and 2005." As a
result, the report stated, "rural poverty has also started
to decline in 10 of 13 countries analyzed."
This is thanks largely to an African "green revolution",
a combination of better crop varieties and increased use of fertilizers,
says soil scientist Pedro Sanchez, director of tropical agriculture
at The Earth Institute at Columbia University in New York City
and co-leader of the Millennium Villages Project, an effort to
transform selected African villages with targeted aid and technology
interventions.
"The green revolution called for by [former U.N. Secretary
General] Kofi Annan in 2004 is really beginning to happen,"
Sanchez says. "Countries, like Malawi, have gone from net
food importers to net food exporters." "In past years,
food production had not been keeping up with population growth,"
adds a spokesperson for the U.N. Food and Agriculture Organization
(FAO). "In recent years, food production has been increasing
more than population growth."
Countries, such as Malawi, have transformed their food production
using relatively simple means. With the help of government subsidies,
farmers can now obtain two bags of fertilizer and five kilograms
of hybrid maize seed at just 25 percent of the actual price. And,
whereas the World Bank and other donors have refrained from such
agricultural subsidies over the past few decades due to concerns
about corruption, they are now supporting them and refocusing
on agriculture as a priority. "It's a 180-degree turn for
the better," Sanchez says. "You can avoid corruption
by keeping it on a small scale."
Thanks to high prices for crops such as corn, which can also
be used to make fuel, farmers have been able to absorb the rise
in fertilizer prices, which have spiked in response to buoyant
oil prices that are also driving demand for biofuels. "[Fertilizer]
is expensive as hell," Sanchez admits. But "if you are
able to use it, it pays."
A host of problems still face sub-Saharan Africa from lack of
access to agricultural markets in the developed world to a continued
failure to produce enough food for the people living there. "Ethiopia
is about to quadruple its food production from 1997 levels,"
Sanchez says. "It's still not enough for self-sufficiency."
It remains to be seen if improved agricultural techniques, wider
use of fertilizer and government subsidies help promote development
and curb hunger in sub-Saharan Africa, a true "green revolution"
like the one that took place in Asia in the 1960s and 1970s. "If
food levels are going up, they are not going up in sufficient
numbers," says Zachary Muburi-Muita, U.N. ambassador from
Kenya. "The condition on the continent that leads to ecological
stress is really low incomes."
But improving farming may yet prove the key to solving that dilemma,
as it remains the key form of economic activity in sub-Saharan
Africa, the World Bank report notes. And Sanchez is in full agreement:
"Agriculture is the engine of growth." After all, Malawi
has done it, with a little help from mother-nature. "Any
farmer can get the inputs at a 75 percent discount," he says.
"That does it, coupled with a couple years with no horrible
droughts."
Source: NYTS
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