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Helping Women to Grow! FINANCIAL SERVICES IN AGRICULTURE VALUE CHAINS Potato Dairy Extensive Livestock Domestic Horticulture Coffee Tuesday 25th May 2010 Consultants and Trainers RESEARCH METHODOLOGY Desk study of relevant materials and past studies, literature review Depth interviews with stakeholders and chain actors Survey (potato farmers) Engagement of stakeholders at various sectoral forums e.g. exhibitions Case study 2 IMPORTANCE OF AGRICULTURE GDP • Direct contribution to GDP 24% • Indirect contribution 27% JOBS • 75-80% of all labour force directly and indirectly EXPORTS POVERTY • More than 65% of all exports • Poverty eradication and food security 3 INTRODUCTION Analysed Allocation of Bank Credit to Private Sector for 12 months to Feb 2010 Building and Finance & construction insurance 4% 4% Agriculture 5% Real estate 7% Trade 16% Private households 15% Consumer durables 7% Transport & communication s 9% Mining and quarrying 2% Manufacturing 12% Business services 9% Other activities 10% 4 POTATO SUB-SECTOR Background 2nd most important food crop after maize Direct and indirect employment 2.5m. Gender parity Contribution of about KShs.10B (Farmers KShs. 5B, Brokers KShs.1B, Others KShs. 4B) Declining production vs. Increasing consumption???? Farmer NM=75.2% Wholesaler/ Transporter NM=18.09% Market Retailer Stall Owner NM=24.52% NM=22.52% Supermarket Processor - Fries GM=259.33% NM= 100% 5 POTATO SUB-SECTOR FINANCIAL ISSUES AVAILABLE PRODUCTS Large players can access funds from banks and MFIs Generally no specialised products for sub-sector except by AFC (Nanyuki and Molo areas only) Group loans through ROSCAs helpful to farmers Microcredit by MFIs especially for traders Government funds e.g. Njaa Marufuku, ASCU RECOMMENDED HIGH-IMPACT PRODUCTS Value Creation – Inputs and irrigation Value Preservation – Cold storage and efficient transport Value Addition – Processing and marketing 6 POTATO SUB-SECTOR - CONCLUSION MAJOR CHALLENGES TO SECTOR FINANCE Low productivity – Inputs, clean seeds Lack of cold storage for seed and ware potato Climate risks – drought, floods, frost Price instability/Market access Excessive intermediaries - brokers LINKAGES AND OPPORTUNITIES Horizontal – Farmer cooperatives for linkage Vertical –e.g. Deepa Industries e.g. Midlands CONCLUSIONS Mobilisation of farmers crucial to financial access Cold storage and vertical linkages – long term More development organisations needed 7 DAIRY SUB-SECTOR Background and Value Chain Contributes 4% to the GDP About 2.25 million Kenyans involved 80 % of marketed milk sold unprocessed. Consumption (100 ltr per capita) not rising to match production Dairy hubs changing the sub-sector rapidly Sector facing crisis due to glut – Over KShs 1 B worth of stock held, prices reduced, capacity installed Production Processing Transport Distribution Chilling Retail 8 DAIRY SUB-SECTOR-FINANCE AVAILABLE PRODUCTS Many specialised products available Processor guaranteed loans and advances on delivery e.g. Equity, Coop Bank Input finance – inputs supplied on credit e.g. Githunguri Dairy SACCOs loans – for capital and operations Equity investments e.g. Aureos Capital, members Micro-leasing e.g. Juhudi Kilimo – Purchase cow Dairy loans by MFIs e.g. Sisdo Wholesale loans e.g. MESPT – ABD for ASALs Various projects e.g. EADD, KDSCP, MESPT, SDCP, IQAM RECOMMENDED HIGH-IMPACT PRODUCTS Value Creation – Purchase of superior breed Value Preservation – Chilling plants/Cold transport Value Addition – Processing long-life products 9 DAIRY SUB-SECTOR-CONCLUSION MAJOR CHALLENGES TO FINANCE Low productivity – Inputs, clean seeds Production seasonality – gluts, low prices Unlinked farmers are locked out Excessive informality in distribution (hawking) Low investment in long-life processing capacity Diminished market prospects – supply inconsistency LINKAGES AND OPPORTUNITIES Mobilise horizontal and vertically unlinked farmers International and regional markets CONCLUSIONS Marketing is the key threat to finance for the sector Producer prices below production costs Inclusion of milk in strategic food reserves urgent More dairy hubs necessary for increased access to finance Replication of success models e.g. Githunguri DFCS/Fresha 10 DOMESTIC HORTICULTURE Background and Value Chain Largest foreign exchange earner KShs 71.6 B Vegetables, herbs and spices 34.2% Fruits and nuts Flowers 40.4% 25.4% Market Value as of 2007 Domestic – Fruits and vegetables, flowers (6%) Tomatoes (1) & passion fruits (5) among most valuable Production Processing Transport Distribution Wholesale Retail 11 DOMESTIC HORTICULTURE - FINANCE AVAILABLE PRODUCTS Many specialised products available Asset finance loans for greenhouses (Amiran kit) by Coop Bank, Equity, KWFT etc Agriculture loans by many MFIs e.g. Sisdo, Pawdep Wholesale loans e.g. MESPT-ABD for ASALs Seasonal and modified loans e.g. pay as you harvest from AFC, Pawdep, KADET etc Micro-leasing for assets such as drip irrigation e.g. Juhudi Kilimo Business loans for horticulture traders e.g. AFC, Equity RECOMMENDED HIGH-IMPACT PRODUCTS Value Creation – Greenhouses and drip irrigation Value Preservation – Cold chains for domestic Value Addition – Juice extraction, drying, fruit concentrates etc 12 DOMESTIC HORTICULTURE-CONCLUSION MAJOR CHALLENGES TO FINANCE Climate risks – droughts, floods, extreme cold Market risks – postharvest gluts too low prices Wastage 30-40% post-harvest losses Lack of diversification by farmers despite the many opportunities e.g. herbs, over 40 vegetables Low value addition despite high potential Poor market linkages – horizontal and vertical High quality just for exports LINKAGE AND OPPORTUNITIES Mobilise farmers for horizontal and vertical linkage Importation of concentrates for juices??? CONCLUSIONS Over-reliance on rain-fed system need to be reduced Mobilisation of farmers require further effort Linkages will be key to accelerating finance Greater integration into higher value chain activities Cold chains are an urgent issue for sustainability 13 COFFEE SUB-SECTOR Background and Value Chain 4th Largest forex earner. Rising prices Sub-sector facing a continuous decline high of 130,000 MT to average 50,000 MT Low domestic consumption but increasing via coffee shops Long and complex value chain Production Marketing Pulping Roasting Milling Retail/Export 14 COFFEE SUB-SECTOR- FINANCE AVAILABLE PRODUCTS Few specialised products available Advances/Seasonal loans by Coffee Development Fund (CODF) <= 2 kg per coffee tree Coffee Rehabilitation loan by CoDF < 1kg per tree Cash-crop loans by AFC for 2-8 years Advances on delivery by millers e.g. Nyambene Mills SACCO loans e.g. Taifa SACCO Supplier credit available to most farmers Grant - Value Chain Based Matching Grant Fund RECOMMENDED HIGH-IMPACT PRODUCTS Value Creation – Warehouse receipting system, Input finance (guaranteed lending) Value Preservation – Upgrade pulping technology Value Addition – Coffee shop setup and operation 15 COFFEE SUB-SECTOR-CONCLUSION MAJOR CHALLENGES TO FINANCE Climate risks – droughts, floods, extreme cold Poor attitude towards coffee farming and the industry Deep mistrust among chain actors Outdated pulping technology Exposure to global economic risks. Export overreliance Lack of traceability. No pay for quality Poor corporate governance by cooperative Too much government LINKAGE S AND OPPORTUNITIES Coffee act to be changed to allow farmers to control the product along the entire value chain Coffee shops – more players are needed CONCLUSIONS Domestic market and diversification of international markets Transparency regarding margins by chain actors 16 EXTENSIVE LIVESTOCK Background and Value Chain Annual Production Value figures in KShs Billions Read Meat 4.66 1.2 0.062 White meat 5.9 Egg production 34.4 2.47 Bee-keeping industry Hides and skin Wool Production Distribution Trade Butchery Slaughter Retail/Export 17 EXTENSIVE LIVESTOCK - FINANCE AVAILABLE PRODUCTS Few specialised products available Livestock purchase loan for traders – Equity/CARE Livestock business/project loan by Kenya Livestock Finance Trust MFI loans for poultry farming (tied to farming cycle) Supplier credit available to poultry farmers Grant – By Government for restocking after drought Livestock insurance by Equity and UAP Insurance RECOMMENDED HIGH-IMPACT PRODUCTS Value Creation – Loans for quality breeds Value Preservation – Micro-leasing for freezers Value Addition – Equipment to add value e.g. meat mincers and electronic scales by butcheries 18 CONCLUSION - FINANCE Farmer mobilisation most crucial for financial access Climate change adaptation key risk mitigation Market driven development of financial services Training of MFIs on agriculture finance critical Grant should be used as last resort Record-keeping by farmers too poor 19 CONCLUSION - GENERAL Consider entire portfolio of value chain for a farmer Ongoing regional integration to impact on value chains Harmonisation of NGO activity in value chains. Cooperation vs competition Collapse of government extension services hurting all sub-sectors 20 THANK YOU FOR YOUR KIND ATTENTION 21