Dr. Akiwumi Ayodeji Adesina, the President of the African
Development Bank Group (AfDB) has said Africa’s future depends on
agriculture as a business and, therefore, urged African governments to
focus on building the agribusiness industry.
He said the three key ways to reign in poverty on the African
continent were to ensure inclusive growth; increase education; and
ensure productivity in agriculture.
Mr. Adesina made the statements during a panel discussion at the
Legon Shared Prosperity Forum held in Accra and moderated by the BBC’s
Lerato Mbele.
He explained that it was important to focus on agriculture as a business and not just a development activity.
He stated that Nigeria implemented an agro-business programme under
which the mobile phone was used successfully to end corruption in
fertiliser distribution, thereby, increasing agricultural production by
about 21 metric tonnes in three years.
“Agriculture pays, nobody drinks oil, nobody drinks gas but everybody eats food,” he stated.
Dr. Adesina said agro-industrialisation was the way to go for Africa,
explaining that Africa’s continued export of its products in their raw
state was not the beneficial.
“Using cocoa exports as an example, he noted that whereas Ghana,
Ivory Coast and other African cocoa exporters produced about 70 per cent
of the world’s cocoa, they had only about three percent of the
chocolate market.
He encouraged African countries to add value to their products and
stated that in order to make agriculture attractive to the youth, their
negative perception about agriculture must be changed for them to
understand its benefits compared to other professions.
“Many rich folks in the United States, the Netherlands and other
countries are farmers,” he noted. “In Nigeria, people are leaving
banking, medicine, and other fields to go into farming.”
Mr Tony Elumelu, an African entrepreneur, philanthropist and founder
of the Tony Elumelu Foundation, also underscored the fact that
agriculture was the future for Africa.
He said about 30 per cent of the number of young people selected for
the Tony Elumelu Foundation’s Entrepreneurial programme were in the area
of agriculture, signifying that young people were increasingly becoming
interested in agriculture as a business.
He said industrialisation with a focus on value addition processes
would not only help exports but also create employment for the youth on
the continent.
No comments:
Post a Comment