Agriculture
‘Embrace Long-Term Investment For Rural Dev.’
The president of international Fund for Agricultural Developmnt (IFAD) Dr Kanayo Nwanze, has said that long-term investment in agriculture will help to boost the sector and make it more profitable for all stakeholders.
Nwanze, who made the observation in Abuja while exchanging views with newsmen said that the lack of long-term investment in agriculture had contributed to the problems in the sector.
“The problem we have in agriculture is that we always have short-term vision of between two, three to five years.
“Agriculture and rural development calls for long-term investment; it calls for longer term vision of about 25 years to 50 years.’’
The IFAD president stressed the need for the Federal Government to envision projects into the next 50 years by estimating where the agricultural sector ought to be in terms of growth and development, among other things.
He noted that several countries that succeeded in their economic transformation achieved the feat through long-term investment in agriculture and urged the government to endeavour to learn from them.
“That is what China did. China in the 1970s and 1980s could not feed itself; about one million people died of famine; but between 1990 and the year 2000, China moved 30 per cent of its population out of poverty through investment in agriculture, rural and community development and putting infrastructure in rural areas. “Vietnam is doing the same thing; but at the fundamental base of this transformation was the role of small producers, holders.’’
Nwanze told newsmen that large-scale commercial farming was not the only way to develop the nation’s agricultural sector as 80 per cent of farmers in the country were small-holder farmers.
He urged the government to ensure that its programmes in agriculture were targeted at small-holder farmers, whom he said, produced between 80 per cent and 90 per cent of the food consumed in the country. “How can you have agricultural programme that does not recognise the role of these people and then between 60 per cent to 70 per cent of farmers are women and you target agricultural programme towards men farmers?
“So your targeting is wrong,’’ he stressed.
On IFAD work in Nigeria, Nwanze said the UN agency had so far supported nine programmes, the funding of five of which the benefiting communities had taken over and were sustaining them.
He harped on the need for government to replicate the five programmes in its effort to transform agriculture at the rural level.
He noted that all the IFAD-assisted programmes were community-driven.
“Our programmes work with communities at the grassroots; they are involved and they determine what the programme should be. “The communities take charge, so there is ownership and there is a degree of sustainability because even when the programme is finished, it continues because it is driven by the communities,” Nwanze said.
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FG, Ogun Distribute Inputs To 2,400 Farmers
Federal Government and the Ogun State Government, on Wednesday, distributed farm inputs to farmers as part of effort to address food security challenge.
The State Director, Federal Ministry of Agriculture and Food Security, Dr. Toyin Ayo-Ajayi, during the flag-off ceremony of Inputs Redemption Under The National Agricultural Growth Scheme-Agro Pocket (NAGS-AP), in Ogun State, disclosed that beneficiaries of the gesture were primarily rice, maize and cassava farmers across the State.
Ayo-Ajayi commended the Ogun State Government for partnering with the government at the centre for the effort in supporting farmers with inputs that would bring about yieldings for local consumption and likely exportation.
She noted that government is supporting rice, cassava and maize farmers with inputs worth N212,000; N189,000 and N186,000 respectively.
The Permanent Secretary in the State Ministry of Agriculture, Mrs Kehinde Jokotoye, who represented the Commissioner in the Ministry, Bolu Owotomo, stated that traditional farmers are critical in food production, hence the need to encourage and support them with inputs that would bring about desired results during harvesting.
Owotomo said: “Let us make good use of this opportunity, so that the success of this phase will make farmers benefit more from the state and federal governments of Nigeria.”
Earlier, State Coordinator, Federal Ministry of Agriculture and Food Security, Dr. Oluwatoyin Ayo-Ajayi, appreciated the present administration for partnering with the federal government for the initiative, adding that the programme is designed to support farmers at the grassroots level in cassava, rice and maize with inputs such as, seeds, pesticides, herbicides and fertilizers, to boost their production and enhance their livelihood.
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