Treat Farmers As Entrepreneurs – Elumelu Tells African Governments

Source: thewillnigeria.com

BEVERLY HILLS, April 26, (THEWILL) – Tony Elumelu, Chairman of Heirs Holdings, the United Bank for Africa and Founder of The Tony Elumelu Foundation, has called on African governments and donors to treat the agricultural sector in Africa as a commercially viable sector with a potential to create millions of jobs and dollars in revenue.

He stated this while delivering the keynote address to agribusiness investors and stakeholders at The Global Food Security Symposium in Washington, DC, adding that agriculture should not be seen as a social welfare program, rather African farmers should be treated as entrepreneurs as governments create the enabling environment for MSMEs to access finance.

The event which was organised by the Chicago Council on Global Affairs gathered a host of multi-disciplinary stakeholders in agriculture and food business, including Elumelu, a member of The Aspen Institute Global Food Security Strategy Group, and presented a platform to discuss transformations in the global food system necessary to feed growing cities.

Speaking from an African standpoint, Elumelu advocated for public and private sector collaboration, recommending the adoption of an Africapitalist approach to achieve the transformation and growth needed to meet the increasing demand for safe and sustainable food.

“Africapitalism promotes the private sector's commitment to Africa's development through long-term investment in strategic sectors of the economy that create economic prosperity and social wealth,” he said.

“If the public and private sector work together in shared purpose, we will be able to retain the desired knowledge and manpower in rural areas in order to support agriculture. We will also be able to control the rate of urbanisation, because we would have made it possible for our young people to earn a good living and grow their businesses right where they were born and raised as agro-allied entrepreneurs.

“I believe that if we transform the agriculture sector, we will transform the African continent!” he said, advocating for large investments that promote mechanized farming and processing as well as capital to partner with the government to provide key infrastructure supportive of sustained growth in the agriculture sector.

He appealed to the U.S. government for a decisive congressional action to reform emergency food assistance by providing USAID with the flexibility to ship or purchase food regionally to avoid distorting local markets, further impoverishing local small holder farmers in Africa.

“Food aid must not become an industry. As an African, I want to appeal to the U.S. Congress and the next president of the United States to make the correct and courageous decision in the next re-authorisation of the farm bill to fight famine with flexibility.”

Other international speakers present at the event were Doug Bereuter, Co-chair, Global Food and Agriculture Program; Member, U.S. Senate, Honourable Jack Reed; and Rajiv Shah, senior advisor to The Chicago Council on Global Affairs and a distinguished service professor at Georgetown University's School of Foreign Service, among others.

Story by David Oputah