The
commissioner for rural economy and agriculture of the African Union, Rhoda
Peace Tumusiime, has called on the private sector to invest in agriculture to increase
productivity and food security in Africa.
She made the remarks on Saturday while addressing the press on the
sidelines of the AU summit, on how the Comprehensive Africa Agriculture
Development Program (CAADP) of the Maputo Declaration of 2003 has been
implemented.
She reminded that in 2003, at the African Union (AU) summit in
Maputo, African leaders pledged to allocate at least 10% of national budgets
to agriculture, to adopt sound agricultural development policies and to achieve
at least 6% agricultural growth per annum, and created specific plans like the
CAADP.
Tumusiime said that as a consequence, agriculture has grown by 4% per annum,
though the target is 6%, which can only be achieved with collaborative efforts.
As a result, public agricultural
expenditure has risen on average by more than 7 % per year across Africa since
2003, nearly doubling since the launch of CAADP.
"Graduates are not
practicing agriculture, they go for soft jobs such as in ICT, and the private
sector is needed in agriculture - if we invest in it Africa's GDP will
grow," she said.
According to the World Bank May
10, 2016 update, Africa is among the fastest growing regions, but it now faces
significant headwinds as a result of global trends and region-specific risks.
Growth has slowed to 3.0% in 2015, down from 4.5 % in 2014.
"We needed mechanized agriculture and many people in agro-processing, more
productivity with standards will generate jobs, increasing opportunities,
especially for women and youth, ensure food security for both subsistence and
international trade, improved nutrition, and strengthening resilience,"
she said.
Agriculture has the greatest
potential to lift the continent out of poverty and alleviate hunger, but the
sector has struggled to perform in recent history, with reforms happening
excruciatingly slowly.
According to the World Bank,
agriculture contributes 32% to Africa's GDP and provides employment to 65% of
the labour force on the continent. In many countries, up to 85% of the
workforce is employed in the agricultural sector, and an estimated 38% of
Africa's working youth is presently employed in the agricultural sector.
Tumusiime added that a large
proportion of African farmers are smallholders and often women, stressing that
agricultural transformation is a springboard to industrialization as it becomes
essential to invest in it and develop accessibility to quality inputs, markets
for produce, good soils and soil management techniques, innovative finance
tools and other resources needed for sustained agricultural production.
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