Editor’s Note: This article is part of a series by the Financial Times’ This Is Africa publication on realizing Africa’s agricultural potential, in partnership with the Rockefeller Foundation. The Skoll World Forum is a proud media partner for the initiative, and you can find the whole series here.
Adam Robert Green is a senior reporter at This is Africa,
focusing on trade and investment, development policy, energy and social
service delivery.
In the 1960s, before it turned to oil, Nigeria was one of the most
promising agricultural producers in the world. Between 1962 and 1968,
export crops were the country’s main foreign exchange earner. The
country was number one globally in palm oil exports, well ahead of
Malaysia and Indonesia, and exported 47 percent of all groundnuts,
putting it ahead of the US and Argentina.
But its status as an agricultural powerhouse has declined, and
steeply. While Nigeria once provided 18 percent of the global production
of cocoa, second in the world in the 1960s, that figure is now down to 8
percent. And while the country produces 65 percent of tomatoes in west
Africa, it is now the largest importer of tomato paste.
Former Nigeria’s minister for agriculture, Akinwumi Adesina, reels off these
statistics with regret as he discusses the country’s deteriorating
agriculture sector. “Nigeria is known for nothing else than oil, and it
is so sad, because we never used to have oil – all we used to have was
agriculture,” he says.
Nigeria’s oil has come at the detriment of the agriculture sector, he
claims, “and that is why we had a rising poverty situation. We were
having growth but without robust growth able to impact millions of
people because it is not connecting to agriculture.”
That might explain why Nigeria’s economic statistics are so puzzling.
While the country has been posting high growth figures, and makes it
into Goldman Sachs’ ‘Next 11’ emerging markets group, absolute poverty
is rising, with almost 100 million people living on less than a $1.25 a
day. The National Bureau of Statistics says 60.9 percent of Nigerians in
2010 were living in absolute poverty, up from 54.7 percent in 2004.
http://www.forbes.com/sites/skollworldforum/2013/08/08/agriculture-is-the-future-of-nigeria/#60da2833bc9b
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