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Farmer First Revisited 12 – 14 December 2007 at the Institute of Development Studies, Brighton, UK Presentation, Theme 1b, Engaging with Markets Discussant: John Dixon (CIMMYT)
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Engaging with the market John D
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Context: generic Differentiation by system including local institutional contexts; off-farm income often > 50% of small farm-household income Increasing demand for HVAPs -- livestock products, fish, vegetables, fruits Globalization asymmetries; supermarket tsunami, with enormous purchasing power; niche markets and yet consolidation of agro- food firms Growth of produce market chains cf. production; neglect of input and services chains (finance, seed, knowledge) Reduction in public sector agricultural input and services provision; uneven replacement by private sector > “coordination” failures Increasing role of NGOs and private sector
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Methodological responses: generic Differentiate explicitly farm household types in different institutional contexts Expect dynamic responses including emergence/evaporation of niche markets and chain firms Map specific chains and cross- linkages Apply participatory methods (originally developed with farmers) with small and large businesses Seek out private-public- partnerships/platforms
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Specific issues from papers MARKET LINKS OPERATIONAL STRATEGY (Clive) Intermediaries Inclusiveness? Incentives for the strong/well informed to include the marginal/resource poor? ALTERNATIVE INNOVATION (Julieta) Damperners: structures, workloads, mind-sets Where is the innovation in CI&I?
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Specific issues from papers UPWARD (Dindo) Pro-poor market access? How poor? Capturing “new” impacts? EMPOWERMENT through MARKET-LED DEVELOPMENT (Jemimah) Ansoff risk assessment matrix – and inbuilt biases Link micro- and macro-processes -- how?
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Specific issues from papers ENABLING RURAL INNOVATION (Susan et al) Scales tipped towards women Non-investment in farms? THE FIRST MILE PROJECT Communications are king! Does this remove asymmetries?
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Key cross-cutting questions for discussion Development through market-based agriculture will generally not eliminate rural poverty -- what are the technology, institutional and policy options to expand the poverty reduction opportunities? The tyranny of scale and negotiation realities mean farmers need to organize volume – what are the options? Quality demands of fast food chains, supermarkets, packaging and processing plants, and hotels --- are innovations needed in participatory methods to identify win-win opportunities and risks? Pilots are plentiful – what are the necessary institutional conditions, incentives and methodologies for scaling out and up?
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Capacity building needs for planning, technical management and resource allocation along with knowledge of contracting need to be reinforced – what are the priorities? Farmers Local intermediaries Large business Governments NGOs
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