Africa: Fertilizer Subsidies Spark Green Revolution?

2 12 2007

I do not know if this can be replicated in most of Africa or even in the region, but this is an embarrassment for the World Bank and a good example of African solutions to African problems. Instead of international organizations (who represent the interest of donors) telling Africans what to do, they need to consult with Africans on what can practically be done to the greatest benefit of the people. I often think the benefit of the donors and the friends of Congressmen on Capital Hill is the primary consideration in many of these negotiations, because they tightly hold the purse strings.

America and some of the donors reactions to this did not shock me at all. What people do not know is that USAID is pretty much controlled by Congress, whom often authorize spending on projects due to political considerations. This is why much USAID money goes into the pockets of domestic firms who “consult”. It also is laundered through the developing nation, who as part of the conditions of the aid, must buy from American companies. I’m sure a lot of American corporations were not happy that Malawi could grow its own food, instead of buying its products.

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Bumper Corn Harvest in Malawi

December 2, 2007

Ending Famine, Simply by Ignoring the Experts

LILONGWE, Malawi — Malawi hovered for years at the brink of famine. After a disastrous corn harvest in 2005, almost five million of its 13 million people needed emergency food aid.

But this year, a nation that has perennially extended a begging bowl to the world is instead feeding its hungry neighbors. It is selling more corn to the World Food Program of the United Nations than any other country in southern Africa and is exporting hundreds of thousands of tons of corn to Zimbabwe.

In Malawi itself, the prevalence of acute child hunger has fallen sharply. In October, the United Nations Children’s Fund sent three tons of powdered milk, stockpiled here to treat severely malnourished children, to Uganda instead. “We will not be able to use it!” Juan Ortiz-Iruri, Unicef’s deputy representative in Malawi, said jubilantly.

Farmers explain Malawi’s extraordinary turnaround — one with broad implications for hunger-fighting methods across Africa — with one word: fertilizer.


Over the past 20 years, the World Bank and some rich nations Malawi depends on for aid have periodically pressed this small, landlocked country to adhere to free market policies and cut back or eliminate fertilizer subsidies, even as the United States and Europe extensively subsidized their own farmers. But after the 2005 harvest, the worst in a decade, Bingu wa Mutharika, Malawi’s newly elected president, decided to follow what the West practiced, not what it preached.

Stung by the humiliation of pleading for charity, he led the way to reinstating and deepening fertilizer subsidies despite a skeptical reception from the United States and Britain. Malawi’s soil, like that across sub-Saharan Africa, is gravely depleted, and many, if not most, of its farmers are too poor to afford fertilizer at market prices.

“As long as I’m president, I don’t want to be going to other capitals begging for food,” Mr. Mutharika declared. Patrick Kabambe, the senior civil servant in the Agriculture Ministry, said the president told his advisers, “Our people are poor because they lack the resources to use the soil and the water we have.”

The country’s successful use of subsidies is contributing to a broader reappraisal of the crucial role of agriculture in alleviating poverty in Africa and the pivotal importance of public investments in the basics of a farm economy: fertilizer, improved seed, farmer education, credit and agricultural research.

Malawi, an overwhelmingly rural nation about the size of Pennsylvania, is an extreme example of what happens when those things are missing. As its population has grown and inherited landholdings have shrunk, impoverished farmers have planted every inch of ground. Desperate to feed their families, they could not afford to let their land lie fallow or to fertilize it. Over time, their depleted plots yielded less food and the farmers fell deeper into poverty.

Malawi’s leaders have long favored fertilizer subsidies, but they reluctantly acceded to donor prescriptions, often shaped by foreign-aid fashions in Washington, that featured a faith in private markets and an antipathy to government intervention.

In the 1980s and again in the 1990s, the World Bank pushed Malawi to eliminate fertilizer subsidies entirely. Its theory both times was that Malawi’s farmers should shift to growing cash crops for export and use the foreign exchange earnings to import food, according to Jane Harrigan, an economist at the University of London.

In a withering evaluation of the World Bank’s record on African agriculture, the bank’s own internal watchdog concluded in October not only that the removal of subsidies had led to exorbitant fertilizer prices in African countries, but that the bank itself had often failed to recognize that improving Africa’s declining soil quality was essential to lifting food production.

“The donors took away the role of the government and the disasters mounted,” said Jeffrey Sachs, a Columbia University economist who lobbied Britain and the World Bank on behalf of Malawi’s fertilizer program and who has championed the idea that wealthy countries should invest in fertilizer and seed for Africa’s farmers.

Here in Malawi, deep fertilizer subsidies and lesser ones for seed, abetted by good rains, helped farmers produce record-breaking corn harvests in 2006 and 2007, according to government crop estimates. Corn production leapt to 2.7 billion metric tons in 2006 and 3.4 billion in 2007 from 1.2 billion in 2005, the government reported.

The rest of the world is fed because of the use of good seed and inorganic fertilizer, full stop,” said Stephen Carr, who has lived in Malawi since 1989, when he retired as the World Bank’s principal agriculturalist in sub-Saharan Africa. “This technology has not been used in most of Africa. The only way you can help farmers gain access to it is to give it away free or subsidize it heavily.”

“The government has taken the bull by the horns and done what farmers wanted,” he said. Some economists have questioned whether Malawi’s 2007 bumper harvest should be credited to good rains or subsidies, but an independent evaluation, financed by the United States and Britain, found that the subsidy program accounted for a large share of this year’s increase in corn production.

The harvest also helped the poor by lowering food prices and increasing wages for farm workers. Researchers at Imperial College London and Michigan State University concluded in their preliminary report that a well-run subsidy program in a sensibly managed economy “has the potential to drive growth forward out of the poverty trap in which many Malawians and the Malawian economy are currently caught.”

Farmers interviewed recently in Malawi’s southern and central regions said fertilizer had greatly improved their ability to fill their bellies with nsima, the thick, cornmeal porridge that is Malawi’s staff of life.

In the hamlet of Mthungu, Enelesi Chakhaza, an elderly widow whose husband died of hunger five years ago, boasted that she got two ox-cart-loads of corn this year from her small plot instead of half a cart.

Last year, roughly half the country’s farming families received coupons that entitled them to buy two 110-pound bags of fertilizer, enough to nourish an acre of land, for around $15 — about a third the market price. The government also gave them coupons for enough seed to plant less than half an acre.

Malawians are still haunted by the hungry season of 2001-02. That season, an already shrunken program to give poor farmers enough fertilizer and seed to plant a meager quarter acre of land had been reduced again. Regional flooding further lowered the harvest. Corn prices surged. And under the government then in power, the country’s entire grain reserve was sold as a result of mismanagement and corruption.

Mrs. Chakhaza watched her husband starve to death that season. His strength ebbed away as they tried to subsist on pumpkin leaves. He was one of many who succumbed that year, said K. B. Kakunga, the local Agriculture Ministry official. He recalled mothers and children begging for food at his door.

“I had a little something, but I could not afford to help each and every one,” he said. “It was very pathetic, very pathetic indeed.”

But Mr. Kakunga brightened as he talked about the impact of the subsidies, which he said had more than doubled corn production in his jurisdiction since 2005.

“It’s quite marvelous!” he exclaimed.

Malawi’s determination to heavily subsidize fertilizer and the payoff in increased production are beginning to change the attitudes of donors, say economists who have studied Malawi’s experience.

The Department for International Development in Britain contributed $8 million to the subsidy program last year. Bernabé Sánchez, an economist with the agency in Malawi, estimated the extra corn produced because of the $74 million subsidy was worth $120 million to $140 million.

“It was really a good economic investment,” he said.

The United States, which has shipped $147 million worth of American food to Malawi as emergency relief since 2002, but only $53 million to help Malawi grow its own food, has not provided any financial support for the subsidy program, except for helping pay for the evaluation of it. Over the years, the United States Agency for International Development has focused on promoting the role of the private sector in delivering fertilizer and seed, and saw subsidies as undermining that effort.

But Alan Eastham, the American ambassador to Malawi, said in a recent interview that the subsidy program had worked “pretty well,” though it displaced some commercial fertilizer sales.

“The plain fact is that Malawi got lucky last year,” he said. “They got fertilizer out while it was needed. The lucky part was that they got the rains.”

And the World Bank now sometimes supports the temporary use of subsidies aimed at the poor and carried out in a way that fosters private markets.

Here in Malawi, bank officials say they generally support Malawi’s policy, though they criticize the government for not having a strategy to eventually end the subsidies, question whether its 2007 corn production estimates are inflated and say there is still a lot of room for improvement in how the subsidy is carried out.

“The issue is, let’s do a better job of it,” said David Rohrbach, a senior agricultural economist at the bank.

Though the donors are sometimes ambivalent, Malawi’s farmers have embraced the subsidies. And the government moved this year to give its people a more direct hand in their distribution.

Villagers in Chembe gathered one recent morning under the spreading arms of a kachere tree to decide who most needed fertilizer coupons as the planting season loomed. They had only enough for 19 of the village’s 53 families.

“Ladies and gentlemen, should we start with the elderly or the orphans?” asked Samuel Dama, a representative of the Chembe clan.

Men led the assembly, but women sitting on the ground at their feet called out almost all the names of the neediest, gesturing to families rearing children orphaned by AIDS or caring for toothless elders.

There were more poor families than there were coupons, so grumbling began among those who knew they would have to watch over the coming year as their neighbors’ fertilized corn fields turned deep green.

Sensing the rising resentment, the village chief, Zaudeni Mapila, rose. Barefoot and dressed in dusty jeans and a royal blue jacket, he acted out a silly pantomime of husbands stuffing their pants with corn to sell on the sly for money to get drunk at the beer hall. The women howled with laughter. The tension fled.

He closed with a reminder he hoped would dampen any jealousy.

“I don’t want anyone to complain,” he said. “It’s not me who chose. It’s you.”

The women sang back to him in a chorus of acknowledgment, then dispersed to their homes and fields.


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5 responses to “Africa: Fertilizer Subsidies Spark Green Revolution?”

5 12 2007
Leya (15:18:13) :

Hey DH I recognize you from a few forums. Nice site you have running here. You wouldn’t know who I am though. I respected your perspecive on many issues and I liked your sesnse of humour on those forums unfortunately those Euros couldn’t handle a taste of their own medicine.

Anyway I don’t know where to put this, but can you read this article and tell me what you think?

http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/africa/7118941.stm

I’m originally from Central Africa, and I’ve pretty much been everywhere in Sub-Saharan AFrica. Anytime there were a small amount of North Africans, Asians and Europeans in the population. They always outperformed the natives to the population and easily outsmarted and commonly overcharged the Native Africans. Sometimes they even had African workers and treated them worse than they do dogs on their own fricking land.

I take serious issue with that. It makes me uncomfortable. I do not want Africa eaten alive by Asians similarly to how I see things done on predominatly Black nations such as Jamaica.

I’m personally tired my fellow Sub-Saharan-Africans allowing other ethnicities to swoop in and take adavantage of their land and outsmart them. All these Asians and Indians are coming on to Sub-Saharan African soil and setting up shop on our land and selling products to us on our own land and we are certainly not reaping the benefits of it, financially, economically or otherwise.

UGH Imagine Africans are risking their lives to go to Europe and America for more opportunities, yet Chinese and Indians are coming to Africa to get job opportunities? Does that make sense to anybody?

In a few years these Asians and Indians are going to start getting overly arrogant and starting verbally abuising the native Africans and have them work for them like dogs. I’ve seen it happen 10,000 times plus before.

5 12 2007
Dragon Horse (16:11:15) :

Leya:

It is obvious that immigrants to Africa, like Lebanese, Chinese, and Indians come with some advantages like education, capital, and often, government cooperation (read: favoritism).

I put the blame on African governments primarily. You did not see Japanese, Koreans, Singaporeans, Malaysians, Taiwanese allow foreigners to come into their market and lord over them like colonial masters. The people would not tolerate it, and although most of these places were not democratic, the governments had a sense of nationalism and would not allow their people to be disrespected in that way.

I think a lot of this has to do with the idea that there is little nationalism in most African nations, because these nations are ‘new’ and obviously not a result of a natural process, as we have seen nation-states form in Europe, through political upheaval and pressure to integrate into one people. Africans are tribal, they identify with tribe, not with nation, not most Africans anyway. When you have that type of situation, it is easy to divide and conquer. When you have that situation it is easy to bribe officials who will let foreigners behave how they want, because the official might not care about anyone but his tribe, clan, or people who have money.

A Japanese or Korean man will think about all the people in his country who are his ethnic group, which would be the vast majority, because they are HIS PEOPLE. There are not many Koreans who are unpatriotic, there are not many Japanese who would side with a foreigner publicly over a Japanese people in such a manner.

This is sad, because if African states were more unified they could have more leverage with foreign entrepreneurs or companies, especially the African states that have natural resources and are not landlocked. They definitely would have more leverage than a place like Taiwan, but to my mind they do not organize to use it…well they are just starting. It seems African nations are really fighting out the Doha Round of the WTO and also with EU trade negotiations. Still, Africans must be more unified, even across borders, because they have relatively small markets. It is often said that all SubSahara Africa has the gross economic output of Belgium.

Having CHinese and Indian firms in Africa is not a bad thing, as long as governments are getting mutual benefit, not just for a government official or his tribe but for the state or at least a province or city of the of the state.

6 12 2007
G-Man (15:33:40) :

DH Wrote:

“Leya:

It is obvious that immigrants to Africa, like Lebanese, Chinese, and Indians come with some advantages like education, capital, and often, government cooperation (read: favoritism). ”

Could you give an example of government cooperation (read: favoritism) in Africa?

Also, in many cases-particularly with East Indians and Lebanese-immigrants came in as traders, merchants or contract laborers and developed wealth by providing goods and services to the local population where before there were none. In most cases, this was done during the colonial era and they received no assistance from the colonial power. In fact, they often had to compete with Europeans who may have been favored by whatever European power controlled that territory.

It’s my understanding that many or most East African countries “encouraged” their East Indian populations to leave, which had a disastrous effect on their respective economies.

I believe there are still some Lebanese communities in Ivory Coast, Senegal, Sierra Leone, etc., but I’m not sure if there were attempts to encourage them to leave the country.

6 12 2007
Dragon Horse (16:32:08) :

G-man:

Don’t get me wrong, I’m not trying to say all “non-indigenous” Africans are parasites, etc. I’m speaking directly to the type of situations Leya has seen.

For instance, I do know, that Lebanese people have a pretty good reputation in the Ivory Coast, but not in Sierra Leone or Nigeria.

What you are saying in regard to East Indians (such as those in India) or Lebanese (such as in Sierra Leone) is correct to my knowledge, as far as background.

I would also say, just because they had to compete against the Brits does not mean they were not more favored than the local Africans.

Even in Jim Crow Mississippi there were Chinese who ran shops, etc, but it was not that they were smarter or harder working than blacks, they got in a niche that blacks couldn’t get into because of their race in a way that did not threaten the white establishment…and that is how they made money. I read an entire book on that. The Chinese and Indians had similar advantages to blacks in South Africa.

The history of middle men minorities in Africa is not altruistic. Lebanese people still control the diamond trade in Sierra Leone, and that was how the rebels smuggled “blood diamonds” out through them. They had been diamond smuggling for awhile though.

The only East African nation I know to have forced Indians out was Uganda, under Idi Amin. They are still well entrenched in Kenya and, I believe also, in Tanzania.

I am trying to find the article now, but I have read complaints by a Kenyan reporters about serious corruption during the time of Jomo Kenyatta that gave favoritism to his tribe, the Kikya and the Indians. The Indians bankrolled a lot of things, since they held a lot of capital, maybe the majority, they had to be in on the take, Kenyatta could not alienate them. Later on

I have a entire post about Chinese in Zambia, and the local complaints:

It is obvious that Chinese bring capital and pay off local officials and after that they can do whatever they want. This is not a new thing…goes on all over the 3rd world. Chinese get away with murder in Myanmar in the same way.

So the situation is mixed, depending on country.

I also know that, in the World Bank book, African Silk Road, it mentioned that Indians companies (from India) that do work in Africa, use local Indian contacts, unlike the Chinese (who outside of South Africa, don’t have any)…they are blamed for high rates of corruption by Amnesty International.

I would say that, unlike the Chinese, Indians do not tend to import labor in mass to Africa, but actually hire and train locals. So they do bring more benefit to the average person on the street then the Chinese, who typically only bring benefit to an upper class, but once in awhile do build necessary roads or buildings to show goodwill (having nothing to do with exporting raw materials)…still, roads, I can get with, new soccer stadiums in a place like Angola I can’t.

6 12 2007
Dragon Horse (19:35:12) :

G-man:

I should also add that, it is obvious, in any nation, when the indigenous people are doing bad and where some of the wealthiest people (or the only wealthy group) is a group seen as being in that position due to colonialism (directly or incorrectly) is going to draw resentment, especially if that group (like the Indians and Lebanese) are seen as not intermixing into the native population but remaining aloft and separate. For more on that, look at the history of Jews in Russia, Germany, and Poland. :-)

So any negative behavior by these groups is going to be seen as 10X worse than if a person considered “indigenous” did it.

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