DAR ES SALAAM, December 3, 2019 –
Recent signs of
transformation in Tanzania’s agricultural sector offer encouraging
opportunities for acceleration of growth, job creation and poverty
reduction, if urgent steps are taken to improve the sector’s policy and
regulatory environment and investments, according
to a new World Bank report.
“The
current trends in agriculture offer a tremendous opportunity to
catalyze private investment, both local and foreign, and raise the
incomes of the poor,”
said Bella Bird, World Bank Country Director for Tanzania, Malawi, Zambia, and Zimbabwe.
“Since agriculture already accounts for a quarter of total GDP and
two-thirds of jobs, enhanced agricultural growth must be part of the
strategy to create more and
better jobs and alleviate poverty.”
In the recently released 13th
Tanzania Economic Update, ‘Realizing the Potential of Agriculture for
Inclusive Growth and Poverty Reduction,’ the authors underscore
the importance of having supportive public policies and spending which
crowds in more private investments needed to catalyze a nascent
agriculture transformation. Signs of transformation within the study
period (2008-2014) include a growing number of medium-scale
farmers which has opened up opportunities for smallholder farmers
through positive spillovers. These farms have created jobs for farmers
through their demand for extra agricultural inputs and financial,
traction rental, and, especially, transport services.
“What
we are seeing for example is that medium-sized farms grew from 23
percent of all farm land holdings in the country in 2008 to 35 percent
in 2014; and these are in the
5–20 hectare (ha) range, compared to the typical smallholding of 1–2 ha, whose numbers are decreasing”
said Holger Kray, World Bank Agriculture Practice Manager and co-author of the report. “These
farmers employ, invest in technology and knowledge, and they attract
commercial services that can provide a basis for agri-food-based tax
revenue. And the
effect of this is that small-scale farms on average improved their
farming outcomes the nearer they were to medium-scale farms, providing
an opportunity for more inclusive growth.”
According
to the report, the presence of medium-scale farms in a district
generally builds and deepens markets for agricultural inputs and outputs
by enhancing local demand,
which attracts suppliers. As a result, small-scale farms were more
likely to use improved seed and fertilizer, cultivate a larger
proportion of their landholdings, and access agricultural extension
services and credit in areas where there are more medium-
and large-scale farms.
The
report shows that the 368,000 medium-scale farms added in Tanzania
between 2008 and 2014 created 13 million days of additional work
annually for hired workers, and US$225–300
million in net backward and consumer links.
The
agriculture sector provides livelihoods directly to around 55 percent
of the population (and three quarters of the poor) and indirectly to a
further 15 percent within related
value chain functions such as traders, transporters and processors. The
report emphasizes the sector’s centrality, by virtue of its size and
spread, to the achievement of both higher and more inclusive overall
growth, emphasizing, “this will remain so for
decades to come,” and recommending several actions that the government
needs to consider in order to make the most of the opportunities in the
sector.
The
Tanzania Economic Update series is published twice year, featuring two
sections – one, an overview of the economy’s recent performance and
outlook; and the second section
focusing on a topic of strategic significance to the country’s
development.
The
latest update shows that economic growth prospects remain positive but
dependent on the speed of reforms to improve fiscal management and the
business environment for private
investment and growth. The main downside risk is continued slow
realization of reforms as global conditions weaken. Over the medium term
a drop in global demand for Tanzania’s exports, tighter financing
conditions, higher international energy prices, and more
volatile commodity prices could heighten uncertainty, discourage
investment, and thus reduce growth.
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