A report released by the World Bank on Monday
predicted that Africa’s Agricultural sector
could become a $1 trillion industry by 2030, if governments and the private
sector put up better policies and empower African farmers.
According to the report, African farmers have a
unique opportunity to tap into growing demand from a promising middle class
with more expensive tastes, an expected four-fold increase in urban
supermarkets in Africa and higher commodity
prices.
Rice, poultry, dairy, vegetable oil, horticulture,
feed grains and processed foods for local markets were likely to be the most
dynamic areas of agribusiness in Africa, the World Bank said.
Countries such as Kenya,
Ghana, Cameroon, Malawi
and Zambia
were already tapping buoyant agricultural markets, the Apex bank had affirmed.
Despite a decade of strong economic growth and a
surge in private sector investment in the region, Africa’s
share of global agriculture exports has fallen. Countries such as Brazil, Indonesia
and Thailand
export more agricultural products than all of Sub-Saharan Africa, the Bank
said.
The Bank said boosting agriculture should become the
top priority of governments so that farmers can take advantage of the increase
in global demand for food and higher prices.
The bank said that they should also look at ways to
boost regional integration to promote more cross-border food trade by reducing
check points.
The 2008-2009 global food price crises prompted a
scramble for land in parts of Asia, Africa and Latin
America. Madagascar’s
president was toppled in 2009 after he negotiated a deal with a South Korean
company to lease half of its arable land to grow food and ship to Asia.
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