SOUTH-EAST ASIA: Financial Meltdown Prompts Return to Agriculture

Global Geopolitics Net Sites / IPS
Thursday, October 30, 2008

All rights reserved, IPS – Inter Press Service, 2008.

Marwaan Macan-Markar

BANGKOK, Oct 30 (IPS) – As South-east Asia feels the heal of the global financial meltdown leaders are turning to the informal sector, particularly agriculture, as a potential provider of employment.

Malaysian Prime Minister Abdullah Badawi echoed such a sentiment this week, resurrecting a view that had emerged after a financial crisis swept through this region in 1997. The Malaysian agriculture sector will help the country to ‘’cushion the impact of the economic downturn,” he said during an encounter with farmers, according to local press reports.

The agriculture sector accounts for about 60 percent of South-east Asia’s informal sector, which is estimated to have 161 million workers, states a new study on labour trends released by the International Labour Organisation (ILO).

‘’Agriculture still accounts for 44.5 percent of (the region’s) total employment, albeit with considerable variations across countries, ranging from less than one percent in Singapore to over 80 percent in Laos,” the ILO study said.

The past decade has also seen South-east Asian cities, which have expanded due to rapid urbanisation and migration from rural areas, taking on a greater role as a venue for the informal labour pool, adds the ILO. Food vendors along the streets are typical of this trend. A majority of them are women, giving ‘’vulnerable” work a ‘’feminine face”.

The number of workers in the informal sector are set to increase as jobs in the region’s formal economic sector, ranging from industries to services, become limited, says Gyorgy Sziraczki, senior economist at the ILO’s Asia-Pacific regional office in Bangkok. ‘’Employers will either delay hiring or freeze new recruitment and the wage growth will slow down, with pay increases lesser than in past years.”

‘’There will be 850,000 fewer jobs created in 2008 than in 2007. And by 2009, that number could go up to 1.27 million fewer jobs in the region,” he revealed in an interview. ‘’The number of unemployed in the region may rise to 18.5 million in 2009 as against the 16.5 million unemployed people in 2007.”

Such dismal estimates are a contrast to the robust economic growth the region experienced till the onset of the spike in oil and food prices early this year and soaring inflation in some countries in the 10-member regional bloc, the Association of South-east Asian Nations (ASEAN). The region’s growth of 6.4 percent in 2007, up from six percent the previous year, ‘’was the highest in over a decade,” states the ILO in its ‘Labour and Social Trends in ASEAN 2008′.

‘’The region’s strong economic performance in 2007 had a positive impact on its labour markets,” adds the 116-page report. ‘’Employment in ASEAN member countries increased from 260.6 million in 2006 to 268.5 million in 2007 — an increase of three percent, or 7.9 million additional jobs.”

The impact from the financial crash will be felt in the export sector in countries like the Philippines, which depends on the Japanese and U.S. markets.

This week, Thailand’s labour ministry revealed that 120 companies had shut down from January till October in industries dealing in food, garments and furniture.

Burma’s garment sector, which exports to Japan and the European Union, may also experience factory closures and workers being laid off, according to the military-ruled country’s garment manufacturers association.

But unlike a decade ago, governments appear more prepared to deal with layoffs and lack of work in the formal economy, says Raj Kumar, at the Economic and Social Commission for Asia and the Pacific (ESCAP), a regional U.N. body based in Bangkok. ‘’The 1997 financial crisis caught governments by surprise and there was little preparation to help people affected by the economies that went into negative growth.”

‘’They have learnt some of the lessons since then and are already talking about it,” he told IPS. ‘’The current talk about the role the agriculture sector will have to play to absorb people from the formal economy was never discussed before the ‘97 crash.”

Yet such expectations for the informal sector — particularly agriculture — to help people from cities to return back to their homes in rural areas and serve as a safety net are not limitless. More so since the rural heartland of many South-east Asian countries have been ignored in the past 10 years, with limited amounts of investment pouring in from national budgets to improve infrastructure and agriculture outputs.

‘’There has been a serious neglect of the agriculture sector in the past decade. The investments have gone down,” says Diderik de Vleeschauwer, spokesman for the Food and Agriculture Organisation’s (FAO) Asia-Pacific office. ‘’Those areas are not what they used to be in ‘97.”

The land area available for agriculture has also decreased, he told IPS. ‘’This is because of new land-use patterns, land being sold for non-agriculture purposes such as hotels and golf courses and the drastic impact of climate change.”

In fact in the Philippines, a country expected to face the brunt of the economic downturn, there is little hope for people who migrated to the cities from the provinces in search of work to go back home.

‘’The agriculture sector in the Philippines is at a very low point because the government’s investment in agriculture is not a priority,” says Jillian Roque, research and advocacy officer at Public Services Labour Independent Confederation, a Manila-based national union of government workers.

‘’The only option available for the Filipinos, who end up in the informal sector is to search for jobs abroad,” she said in a telephone interview about a country that already has 10 percent of its population as overseas migrant workers. ‘’There will be an increase in people wanting to leave the country even if there is a threat of abuse and exploitation. The crisis is creating a sense of desperation.”

ARGENTINA: Caution and Enthusiasm for Fish Farming

Global Geopolitics Net Sites / IPS
Saturday, October 25, 2008

All rights reserved, IPS – Inter Press Service, 2008.

Marcela Valente* – Tierramérica

BUENOS AIRES, Oct 25 (IPS) – Fish farming is expanding in Latin America, fuelled by the demands of a global market that is facing the stagnation of commercial fishing. But some people are warning about the limits of industrial production of fish and the environmental and social risks.

According to the United Nations Food and Agriculture Organisation (FAO), 45 percent of the fish consumed in the world comes from fish farms. Today that means 48 million tonnes, but by 2030 that volume would have to be doubled because of the decline in commercial fishing and the increasing demands of a growing population.

In Mexico, aquaculture dates back to the pre-Hispanic era. Historians say that several species were raised in ponds and that the Maya Indians controlled fish reproduction in natural pools known as ”cenotes”.
[Read more...]

DEVELOPMENT-CAMEROON: Sweet Deal For Bee-Keepers

Global Geopolitics Net Sites / IPS
Thursday, October 23, 2008

All rights reserved, IPS – Inter Press Service, 2008.

Tamfu Hanson

GAROUA, Oct 23 (IPS) – Paul Mboui’s family will soon move into the attractive new bungalow he is building. Then he will rent out his present compound as a warehouse to Guiding Hope, the honey trading company that has made him prosperous.

”I have come to realise that one can make it even in the village depending on hard work, honesty and dedication,” says Mboui, 42. Mboui is the epitome of success in Ngaoundal, home to one of Cameroon’s oldest military training camps, about 560 kilometres from the capital, Yaoundé. Mboui is field operations manager for Guiding Hope, a company formed to improve income for bee-keepers in the area around Ngaoundal.

Guiding Hope’s shareholders include Mboui, who coordinates purchasing and processing of honey and wax, Managing Director Michael Njikeu and Production Manager Herman Tcamba, responsible for processing honey for the national market. Verina Ingram oversees environmental policy and international relations, while Yves Soukontua is in charge of research and development. Coordinating client relations is the sixth and final shareholder, Rebecca Howard, indisputably the driving force behind Guiding Hope.

Five years ago, Howard was an undergraduate student of anthropology interning with a network of community-based NGOs, one of which took her along to meet the bee-keepers in the Adamawa area of northwestern Cameroon. ”I developed an interest in traditional methods of bee-keeping and the role it plays in the local economy and immediately realised the need for a more reliable market,” recounts Howard.

Back in Britain, she linked up with Tropical Forest Products, a company dealing in tropical products and buying honey from Zambia, and proposed the idea of importing good quality honey from Cameroon.

As a volunteer development coordinator for the company, Howard gained a wealth of experience about honey quality, and the challenges of exporting it to the European market. She traveled to Uganda and Rwanda to learn more about honey production in the African context while maintaining her Cameroon connections.

Fair trade for traditional bee-keepers

Three years ago, Howard returned to Cameroon create Guiding Hope whose objective is to develop profitable, environmentally and socially responsible trade of high quality, fair-trade organic honey and other bee products for the African and European markets. Working closely with about 10,000 bee keepers, Guiding Hope is promoting and helping to refine traditional apiculture methods; introducing new, high-value wax products such as soap and candles; and promoting export.

Products include the naturally smoky flavoured liquid from beehives in the rich flowering Adamawa forest savanna. There is also a creamy, naturally granulated white honey from the Kilum-Ijum forest — one of the last remnants of cloud forest rich in biodiversity. Guiding Hope also produces hand-made soaps, candles and other beeswax-derived products.

Last year Guiding Hope sold two million litres of honey worth an estimated at $400,000 to Chad, Nigeria and Gabon as well as within Cameroon. Wax brought in approximately $240,000.

If all goes well, five containers of honey and five more of wax will be exported to the European market by June 2009. ”But if we don’t make a quick breakthrough in Europe, we may be turning to South Africa and other places,” says Howard.

The export of honey to the European Union is hanging in the balance as Guiding Hope is still working with the government and partners on setting up a honey monitoring residue system.

”We are working towards organic certification with a strict system of control and traceability from bee farmers to the bottle to ensure purity, quality and consumer confidence,” says Guiding Hope director Njikeu.

”With the assistance and guidance of Guiding Hope, we are adding more value to our products. I learned bee keeping from my dad, but I am doing better than he was in his days. I pay school fees for my three junior brothers and my own daughter,” declares Aminatou Hamoa, a 25 year old single mother who is in the honey business.

A local administrative official of the ministry of agriculture, Joseph Samaki, is quick to add that the project will tremendously improve the welfare of the population. ”It will wipe the sweat of bee keepers who hitherto received very little for their efforts,” he stresses.

Guiding Hope was one of winners of the 2008 awards for innovative projects for sustainable development awarded by the SEED Initiative. SEED — ”Supporting Entrepreneurs for Sustainable Development” — is a global network that supports progress on Millennium Development Goals in line with the principles outlined at the World Summit on Sustainable Development in Johannesburg in 2002.

LAOS: Unexploded Cluster Bombs Hold Up Farming

Global Geopolitics Net Sites / IPS
Wednesday, October 15, 2008

All rights reserved, IPS – Inter Press Service, 2008.

Marwaan Macan-Markar

VIENTIANE, Oct 15 (IPS) – As the country affected most by cluster munition in the world Laos is a natural leader in the global campaign to have the deadly ‘bomblets’ banned.

This month Laos will host a conference aimed at drumming up support from South-east Asian governments for the Cluster Munitions Convention (CMC) — which opens for signature in Oslo, early December. Currently Indonesia, Singapore and Thailand are among countries in the region that have stockpiles, while Singapore is among seven Asian countries that produce these weapons.

The groundbreaking international treaty crossed a milestone in May, when 107 governments agreed to adopt the text of the CMC at a conference in Dublin. It aims to prohibit the use, production, stockpiling and transfer of these munitions, resembling a tennis ball and stone-heavy.
[Read more...]

WORLD FOOD DAY: Eating Less, Paying More

Global Geopolitics Net Sites / IPS
Wednesday, October 15, 2008

All rights reserved, IPS – Inter Press Service, 2008.

Ali Gharib

WASHINGTON, Oct 15 (IPS) – Despite wall-to-wall media coverage of the financial crisis rocking the U.S. and, increasingly, other financial systems around the world, a crisis with a larger scope is brewing with little attention.

Many people around the globe are feeling the burden of higher food and energy prices, found a new international poll of 26 countries released ahead of World Food Day Thursday.

The rising food prices, said the poll from the BBC World Service conducted by University of Maryland’s Programme on International Policy Attitudes (PIPA) and the polling firm Globescan, were sometimes so acute as to affect people’s eating habits, especially in developing countries.
[Read more...]

AGRICULTURE-MALAWI: Going Against the Grain on Subsidies

Global Geopolitics – Global News Blog – Global Politics Online – IPS
Saturday, September 06, 2008

All rights reserved, IPS – Inter Press Service, 2008.

Busani Bafana

LILONGWE, Sep 5 (IPS) – In each of the past three growing seasons, the family of Bernadette Banda, in Chidambo village in the central region of Malawi, has doubled the maize harvest from the family plot, thanks to a government input subsidy programme.

Subsidised hybrid maize seed and fertilisers have helped boost harvests and incomes at household level for more than 1.7 million farming families in Southern Africa’s most densely populated country. Resource-poor smallholder farmers like the Bandas have demonstrated that subsidies — opposed by international donors such as the World Bank and the International Monetary Fund — can overturn a food crisis if applied correctly.

In 2005, Malawi experienced a major famine where more than 5 million people needed food aid. Three years later, Malawi has dramatically moved from a serious food deficit to becoming a net food exporter, with the 2008 maize harvest of 2.6 million metric tonnes the highest on record.

”We used to have food shortages but now that has changed as a result of the subsidy programme, says Banda. ”My family has enough to eat and we are able to sell some of the maize to get cash.”

While the subsidy programme may not be the silver bullet for the global food crisis, it has bolstered food security in Malawi. Banda explains that sustained bumper maize harvests have freed her family from hunger and given them a better outlook on life.

In a country where almost 7.2 million people — 60 percent the population — live under the poverty line, each extra bag of grain harvested and extra kwacha earned makes a difference. The Banda’s compound in Chidambo village is a hive of activity. Bricks are being moulded and neatly lined up to dry in the sun ready for firing. The bricks are for a new house for the Bandas and their five children.

A short walk from their home is the homestead of another farmer, David Mpezeni (32). Mpezeni saved some of the proceeds from selling excess grain in an account opened with the village Bank. He had built a brick house with a wrought iron roof.

”I am food secure,” he says pointing to a loaded traditional granary. ”This granary holds a harvest of seven ox carts of maize (about 1 tonne of maize). From the surplus maize l sold, I have been able to build a new house which is better than the old thatched one you see over there.”

Government officials, the private sector representatives and researchers say the maize productivity turn around is proof that with the right policies, Malawi can say goodbye to international food aid. As a result of the subsidy programme, Malawi’s grain production tripled from national production average of 1.2 million metric tonnes in 2005 to 3.4 million metric tonnes in 2006 and 2007.

It was a government policy intervention which changed country’s food fortunes to the extent that it has even exported grain to its neighbour Zimbabwe. Malawi President Bingu wa Mutharika — who is also the Minister of Agriculture — went against the grain and risked international donor support by promoting the subsidy programme. Government distributed seed and fertiliser vouchers allowing small holder farmers to buy two 50 kg bags of fertiliser which would normally cost the equivalent of $14 for around a fifth of the market price.

In addition, farmers received a coupon for maize seed. Average yields per hectare have more than doubled. Donors opposed the programme at the outset, but faced with spectacular results, some have changed their opinion.

”Malawi and Africa need subsidies because within the three years of our programme our farmers have benefited,” says Dr Andrew Daudi, Principal Secretary in the Ministry of Agriculture. This year, the government has budgeted about $14 million for the programme, which will include provision of pesticides and storage space.

Players in the private sector have also been won over. Concerns that the subsidy programme would fuel budget deficits and distort the market and be costly to administer. The jump in maize production, saving the country millions of dollars in imported food aid, has players in the sector commending the programme for promoting ”smart partnerships” with government.

”There is no doubt that the programme is a success,” says Dimitri Giannakis, chairman of the Fertilizer Association of Malawi. ”Initially we thought it would be devastating to the fertiliser industry and that government would dominate the whole process. But with dialogue between ourselves and government, we worked together and came up with a formula that will promote our business and assist government at the same time.”

The Seed Traders Association (STAM) which represents eight companies has reported an increase of about 40 percent in actual sales by participating seed suppliers since the start of the subsidy programme.

The programme has not been without its challenges. Farmers and human rights organisations want more people to be included. In addition, the programme needs to adjust the roll-out times for farmers to get the input in the right quantities and on time for planting.

”Subsidies are good and we should advocate for them but not indefinitely,” says Richard Kachule, a researcher at Bunda College who coordinated a study OF the input programme. The study was funded by the Food, Agriculture and Natural Resources Policy Analysis Network (FANRPAN), a regional multi-stakeholder network promoting effective food security policies in Southern Africa.

Kachule adds that subsidies should have a sustainable exit strategy. ”The whole issue of subsidies is looking at inputs marketing but what of the output markets? Once you develop output markets, producers must be able to sell at higher prices to be able to afford the agriculture inputs without subsidies.”

How Malawi achieved its ‘Green Revolution’ and tackled the food crisis was the focus for 200 international and local delegates at a Regional Stakeholders Policy Dialogue convened BY FANRPAN in Lilongwe Sep. 1-5.

LATIN AMERICA: Food Price Hikes Hit Poor Hard – ECLAC

Global Geopolitics – Global News Blog – Global Politics Online – IPS
Friday, September 05, 2008

All rights reserved, IPS – Inter Press Service, 2008.

Daniela Estrada

SANTIAGO, Sep 5 (IPS) – The countries of Latin America have coped relatively well so far with the rising global food and fuel prices. But the main challenge they face is to focus more attention on the plight of the poor, experts said at a seminar being held in the Chilean capital.

”The countries have responded very well and very promptly, but obviously some are facing major difficulties, like nations in Central America that are not only net food importers, but oil importers as well,” Alicia Bárcena, executive secretary of the Economic Commission for Latin America and the Caribbean (ECLAC), told IPS.

Bárcena avoided calling the present situation in Latin America and the Caribbean a ”crisis”, because ECLAC, a United Nations agency, estimates that the regional economy will grow by 4.7 percent in 2008 and by about four percent in 2009, thereby achieving seven consecutive years of growth.

However, she warned about the possible effects, particularly on the poorest segments of the population, of accelerating inflation, which has been increasing year on year.

Over the last year, the consumer price index (CPI), especially for foods, has increased by an average of 16 percent in most of the economies in the region, Bárcena said. CPIs have seen increases of between seven and 30 percent, depending on the country.

The real cost of basic products has increased by 140 percent over the last 25 quarters (six and one-quarter years) in a row, Bárcena said.

ECLAC forecasts, omitting the effects of any measures taken or planned by governments, indicate that if inflation rises by 15 percent, the poverty rate will increase by three percentage points, from 35 percent of the population in 2007 to 38 percent.

Bárcena opened the two-day seminar on ”The Food and Energy Crisis: Opportunities and Challenges for Latin America and the Caribbean” Thursday, at the ECLAC headquarters in Santiago, with a presentation on food and fuel price volatility in the region.

”One of the goals of the seminar is for countries to compare their plans and policies, and for ECLAC to help on the technical aspects to facilitate early detection of potential economic and social impacts,” she said.

Nils Kastberg, the regional head of the United Nations Children’s Fund (UNICEF), said he was concerned about the food and ”nutritional” security of Latin American children and young people in the present inflationary context.

There are fears that chronic malnutrition (low height for age), in particular, may increase, Kastberg said.

”Food prices will continue to rise until 2015 because of the levels of supply and demand,” said Máximo Torero of the International Food Policy Research Institute (IFPRI), where he is head of the Markets, Trade and Institutions Division and coordinator for Latin America and the Caribbean.

”The region’s immediate response to the price hikes was protectionism,” Torero told IPS.

”Central America, for instance, tried to create a regional grain reserve, which has dwindled away because experience demonstrates that it can’t work. It’s very difficult to generate food reserves and fix a stable price,” he said.

”Many countries initially instituted price controls, which are a bad idea because they are not sustainable,” he said.

”Gradually, countries have implemented better policies that are more market-oriented. They have begun to lower import tariffs and reduce local taxes so that consumers can maintain their purchasing power,” Torero said.

”But what is still lacking is a stronger reaction in defence of the poorest sectors. A start has been made on reactivating conditional money transfer programmes, but the value of these is not keeping up with inflation. This is where I think faster responses are needed,” he said.

In Torero’s view, assistance programmes must be properly targeted. ”The dichotomy between the urban poor and the rural poor still exists. Governments have mainly addressed the problems of city dwellers and forgotten about those living in the countryside, where the poverty experienced by landless families, for example, may be even more extreme,” he said.

”In structural terms, increasing the productivity of the agricultural sector has still not yielded much in the way of significant results,” he said.

Bárcena, too, said ”the most successful programmes are the most tightly focused ones, because they reach poor families directly.”

”When a subsidy is applied across the board, sometimes it is the well-off who benefit most, as in the case of petrol subsidies,” she said.

The head of ECLAC said ”petrol is associated mainly with individual transport for people and, in a very few cases, with transporting loads over short distances,” unlike diesel fuel, which ”is used predominantly for public transport and the trucking industry.”

Bárcena stated that Latin America and the Caribbean is the world’s most unequal region in terms of wealth distribution, a fact that in her view should directly influence public policies.

”Differential energy pricing policies may have to be introduced, such as applying a sliding scale, or cross-subsidies, to fuel prices,” she said.

Torero said ”there is still a great deal to be done. Although price volatility has already been discussed, I think we must discuss what concrete measures need to be implemented now.”

”In Latin America, the present situation is more of an opportunity than a problem, but careful attention needs to be paid to inequality, and especially to people who are poor or extremely poor. That is where the crisis is biting,” he concluded.

Q&A: Finding New Ways To Reach Farmers

Global Geopolitics – Global News Blog – IPS
Saturday, August 23, 2008

All rights reserved, IPS – Inter Press Service, 2008.

Interview with Frances Kimmins, director of Policy and Partnership for the Research Into Use Programme

PRETORIA, Aug 23  (IPS)  – When beekeepers in central and eastern Uganda got vouchers to go online at internet cafés, their most popular query was how to treat bee stings. A local agricultural information provider replied in Baganda, the local language.

In Kenya, horticultural entrepreneurs and researchers lobbied the Ministry of Agriculture to update a clause in the Pesticides Act. This allowed a local company to market a natural pest control package to exporters of high-value products, such as green beans, baby corn and cut flowers, and comply with European Union requirements for no pesticide residues.

In Tanzania, where the cheapest transport is donkeys, a comic book explains how to improve their performance through taking good care of them.

The key here is information: tailored to farmers and to policy makers, requested and delivered through a variety of ways, from computers to comics, and based on research on natural resources funded by the UK’s Department for International Development (DFID).

Coming up with creative ways to share agricultural information on a large scale is the goal of the Research Into Use programme (RIU) under DFID’s Strategy for Research on Sustainable Agriculture.

RIU moves away from the generation of new knowledge to the ways in which knowledge is put to use and, in the process, reduces poverty.

Since 2006, RIU has worked in the regions with the highest levels of poverty — South Asia and Sub-Saharan Africa. Malawi, Nigeria, Rwanda, Sierra Leone, Tanzania and Zambia are all in the process of setting up RIU programmes.

This year, RIU is seeking to fund initiatives to communicate DFID-funded research on natural resources in a further ten African countries. In its search for new initiatives, it is seeking out in particular projects that make use of new communication technologies, such as educational entertainment, and public/private partnerships.

IPS reporter Mercedes Sayagues spoke to Frances Kimmins, RIU’s director of Policy and Partnership, and manager of the Innovation Challenge Fund that is calling for proposals.

<b>IPS: Why has research not reached farming communities?</b>

Frances Kimmons: Its mainly due to the poor flow of information between those who generate research knowledge and those who need to use it.

The reasons include poor infrastructure in rural locations, inadequate financial and business services, weak incentives for researchers to package and disseminate their results informally, poor incentives for producers, particularly those based in risky environments, to invest in new technologies, and few financial incentives for companies to engage with rural communities.

Moreover, research has remained small scale. You are lucky if you reach one hundred farmers. DFID wants to reach thousands of farmers who live away from urban centers, without roads and telecommunications.

<b>IPS: Isn’t that the role of extension workers?</b>

FK: Investment by governments and donors on agricultural extension has declined in the last 20 years, in favour of governance and social development. This is a worldwide funding pattern, with the exception of Latin America, especially Brazil — and it is reaping the benefits.

<b>IPS: How can new communication technologies help?</b>

FK: By making the gaining of knowledge fun and relevant. This is the exciting part: creating new models of agricultural extension using new communication technologies. Bringing information to the Ugandan beekeepers via the internet is cheaper than using traditional extensionists and can reach larger numbers. People associated with universities and research can become information providers for farmers: we call them info-mediaries, or knowledge brokers.

In Kenya, we engaged policy-makers in democratic ways. This is a new area to explore: what kind of information on agriculture do MPs need to make decisions that can affect millions?

<b>IPS: What are the cotton, fisheries and legume platforms established by RIU in Malawi recently?</b>

FK: A platform gathers all players in one sector: producers and buyers, processors and retailers, researchers and government.

For example, cotton is an expensive crop, vulnerable to disease and pests. Farmers need to know when to spray, and even more importantly, when not to spray. A judicious use of chemicals will save farmers money.

The platform can also give the opportunity and the knowledge for farmers to go organic, linking them to markets and buyers, to innovations in the cotton system in Malawi and in the world.

<b>IPS: Will rising food prices create a window of opportunity for African farmers?</b>

FK: In the short term, it helps. But food prices are volatile – who knows what they will be like in 12 months? What Sub-Saharan Africa needs is greater ownership of food production and more control over its food security. This should become a major policy goal.

<b>IPS: What is your position on genetically modified crops?</b>

FK: We have had no demands for it, yet. Personally, I’d go on a case-by-case basis. The process of genetically modifying crops is not too different from what farmers have done for centuries. It could be a hugely important tool to obtain drought-tolerant crops. It could also distort seed systems. It depends on how it is packaged. The priority for African countries must be to develop biosafety protocols.

<b>IPS: How will you address the specific needs of women farmers?</b>

FK: On farm and off farm, women are major contributors to agriculture. Yet it is difficult to hear their voices. We give preference to projects that target women farmers.

<b>IPS: Why is one-third of your budget devoted to monitoring and learning?</b>

FK: Researchers don’t spend enough time learning, capturing what works and what doesn’t. We want a strong emphasis on evidence-based lessons for this programme.