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Is an Agriculture Centered Development Strategy a Viable Strategy for Africa? Questions From the Ethiopian Experience. • Berhanu Nega and Berhanu Adenew Introduction • I would first like to thank the organizers for inviting me to participate in this conference. I would also like to welcome all of you to Ethiopia for the conference. I hope you enjoy your stay • I also like to apologize (to the organizers and particularly to the discussant) for not having the paper ready for the discussant. My life has taken a sudden turn since I agreed to present the paper • So, rather than present a full paper with all its merits, I will attempt to raise some issues relevant to the broad topic I agreed to discuss that are becoming important policy issues in Ethiopia and to ask our colleagues from other countries to comment on them based on their own country experiences • I am not an agricultural economist by training and I am looking at the issue from a broader perspective of “development.” Therefore, I am going to speak in broad strokes, obviously missing the fine details What are the issues? • What is the nature of agriculture as an economic • • • • activity? What is the nature of the agricultural sector in Sub Saharan Africa in general and Ethiopia in particular? Can the lessons of the green revolution in Asia in the 70s be replicated in Africa today? Given this structure, can agriculture as a sector be the center (main driver) for the growth of economies such as Ethiopia? What are the possible alternatives for poverty reduction and growth? The case for an Agriculture Led growth strategy! • This is a strategy currently followed by the • • • • Ethiopian government and supported by important institutions such as the World Bank largely based on current endowment and comparative advantage arguments… More fertilizers and improved seeds Leads to high levels of land productivity Leads to high levels of income of the “peasant masses” Leads to increased demand for industrial goods… Some points about agriculture in general… • Two important characteristics of agriculture as • • • distinct from other industries (Cramer et.al, 2001) First, it is characterized by the cyclical nature of production caused primarily by physical and biological factors Second, the sector faces serious price instability (owing to Engel’s law and other factors internal and external to the sector) Therefore, a very risky business What Characterizes the Agricultural Sector in Africa today? • declining real output prices (declined by about 2.6% between 1996-2001) • rising input prices (esp. fertilizer, increased by 37.5% during the same time) • limited national markets (seven farmer to one urban consumer in Ethiopia) • • • • high price instability in liberalised markets high climatic and market risk absence of rural financial markets declining farm sizes (farm sub-division) from 2.2 ha. Per hh in 1978 to 1 ha in 2001 with no irrigation. Implications to Economic Growth and Rural Poverty: The Case of Ethiopia • GDP growth followed the pattern of the growth of value-added in the agricultural sector. • The agricultural sector has long been susceptible to the fragility of nature, particularly rainfall. Growth in GDP follows the pattern of growth in agriculture Trend in GDP: Moderate and irregular Per capita value-added in the agriculture has been declining Per capita value-added in the nonagricultural sector has been rising Rural and Urban Per-Capita Income, 1980/81 constant prices 1250.0 Urban Per-Capita Income 650.0 350.0 Rural Per-Capita Income 50.0 19 60 / 19 61 63 / 19 64 66 /6 7 19 69 / 19 70 72 / 19 73 75 / 19 76 78 /7 9 19 81 / 19 82 84 / 19 85 87 / 19 88 90 / 19 91 93 / 19 94 96 / 19 97 99 / 20 00 02 /0 3 In Birr 950.0 Source: MOFED and CSA( Statistical Abstract, Various Issues) Annual Average Per-Capita Income, In Birr, Constant 1980/81 Prices National Per Capita Income Rural Per-Capita Income Urban Per-Capita Income 1960/61-1973/74 240.2 194.6 732.4 1974/75-1990/91 242.1 158.8 914.6 243.8 134.9 993.2 241.4 163.8 877.6 1991/92-2003/04 1960/61-2002/03 Source: MOFED and CSA( Statistical Abstract, Various Issues) Population projection for Ethiopia for selected years ('000) 120000 100000 80000 60000 Urban National 40000 Year 2030 2025 2020 2015 2010 2005 2002 0 1999 20000 1995 population 140000 Fig.5. Estimated food demand ('000 tons) 140000 120000 Food demand (tons) based on 2.5 qt/yr/pers 100000 80000 60000 40000 Population (000) Year 2030 2020 2015 2010 2005 2001 0 2000 20000 2030 2020 2003 2002 2001 2000 1999 1998 1997 1996 1995 70 60 50 40 30 20 10 0 Fig.6. Drought affected population and projections in millions (1995-2030) Agriculture During the Green Revolution in Asia in the 1970s: Can Africa Emulate that today? • The answer is no because the international environment has changed so much today compared with the 70s • • • big deficit markets, lower use of trade rising or stable output prices comprehensive agric support policies: fixed prices, floor prices buffer stocks & stabilisation operations substantial fertilizer subsidies huge subsidies to large-scale irrigation So, what are the alternative options for Africa? • While trying to increase productivity in • • agriculture is a valid policy to increase income it is a questionable strategy at best to think of the sector as the “lead sector” In fact, the development of other sectors around agriculture, particularly the process of urbanization seem to help the development of the agricultural sector In general economic diversification seems to be a better strategy both for poverty alleviation in rural areas and for overall economic growth Benefits of Diversification ? • • • • • • helps overcome seasonality helps ameliorate risk increases knowledge, skills, adaptability generates financial resources yield growth arises from non-farm earnings poverty & vulnerability most intractable with high agric & subsistence reliance Diversification Leads to Mobility & Migration diversification one facet of human mobility mobility essential to economic dynamism ceaseless circulation the norm in growing economies longer duration and more permanent movements: migration, urbanisation, international migration importance of remittances good for the poor and for agriculture Agriculture Benefits from Diversification (Ellis, 2004) Tanzania Shillings (Thousands) Tanzania Sample 310 HHs 2001 Agric Contribution to HH per Capita Income (Red) Net Agric Output per Hectare (Green) 400 43% 200 68% 63% 56% 339 0 72 I 96 II 139 III Income Quartiles IV Urbanisation holds the key to Poverty Reduction and growth in SSA • provides growing markets for agric output • Helps in the transformation of agriculture through the production of high value crops (horticulture…etc.) • benefits from agglomeration economies • encourages economic specialisation • provides employment & upward mobility • reduces unit cost of service provision • creates low-cost labour-intensive services The Value of Urbanization for Ethiopian Agriculture • empirical projections using a preliminary Demo Economic Model that Jean Marie Cour developed for Ethiopia illustrate exactly this point. (The model was originally done for Seven West African Countries with similar results) • a faster urbanization implies not only higher levels of GDP overall compared with a slower pace of urbanization, but more interestingly, rural incomes will be much higher under a faster urbanization scenario compared with the alternative. • A projection for the year 2025 using two urbanization scenarios (20% and 40% urbanization) show that national per capita GDP would be US$ 468 under the 40% scenario compared with US$ 288 for the 20% scenario while rural GDP per capita will be higher by US$79 under a faster urbanization. • Equally interestingly, the productivity differentials between urban and rural areas will reduce from 4.1 to 3.1 under a faster urbanization scenario So, what does this mean for Policy Priorities in SSA? In Ethiopia? • poverty reduction requires human mobility • mobility needs to be facilitated, not disabled (Implications • for land policy in Ethiopia?) In general, policy should support: exchange, mobility, communication, information, infrastructure Social and economic protection of people on the move removal of constraints on urban growth & dynamism Provision of services in urban areas resist enforced relocations out of urban areas pursue growth where it is observed to occur • I Think I Should Stop • there!!! Thank You