Business
Farmers Decry Poor Funding Of Agriculture
The Association of Small Scale Agro-Producers in Nigeria (ASSAPIN) has decried poor funding of agriculture by the three tiers of government.
The National Vice President of the association, Mr Joshua Mabinuori, made the observation in an interview with newsmen on Thursday in Ijebu-Ode, Ogun.
Mabinuori stressed the urgent need for government at all levels to invest more in agriculture to avert food crisis.
The ASSAPIN boss urged the government to implement the 10 per cent budgetary allocation to the agriculture sector recommended by African heads of State in their 2003 Maputo Declaration.
According to him, four per cent budgetary allocation or below as has been the practice cannot solve the problem of food crisis in the country.
He suggested that Nigeria should emulate Malaysia which spent 25 per cent of its annual budgetary allocation on agriculture for 25 consecutive years.
“It is a well known fact that Malaysia is not the only country that has adopted this strategy. Developed countries with annual food surplus do allocate substantial percentage of their budgetary allocation to agriculture.
“ We therefore want to use this opportunity to call on the Federal Government to pay urgent attention to the deplorable situation of agriculture in the country and proffer solutions to ameliorate the problems.
“If government refuses to allocate substantial amount of money to agriculture where do we get money to subsidise production cost and ameliorate the climate change that impedes smooth food production from time to time.
“We want government to note that no nation attain food sufficiency without proper and adequate funding of agriculture.”
Besides, Mabinuori also urged the government to take steps towards subsidising farm produce to enhance food security in the country.
He explained that such step would encourage farmers to produce more food and discourage food importation.
“ The small-scale farmers, therefore, urged government at all levels to purchase farm produce at a predetermined, appropriate and profitable prices from farmers at the farm gate rather than subsidising inputs.
“In other words, the problems and challenges of Nigerian farmers is not the cost of input but the poor price offered to the farmers for their produce at the market place.
“If government can subsidise farm produce, farmers will be able to break even and this would in turn encourage farmers to produce more food.”