My father did not want me in agriculture because he was a poor farmer--- AfDB President, Adesina
My father did not want me in
agriculture because he was a poor farmer--- AfDB President, Adesina
When he was ushered into the Iowa
State Capitol in Des Moines, Iowa, last week, for the conferment of
the 2017 World Food Prize award , Dr. Akinwumi Adesina received a
standing ovation from international leaders, policy makers, farmers,
executives from agribusiness , non-governmental organisations, and
scientific.
The award was an endorsement of
his roles over the past two decades with the Rockefeller Foundation,
at the Alliance for a Green Revolution in Africa (AGRA), and as
Minister of Agriculture of Nigeria.
Dr. Adesina, , now the President
of the African Development Bank, has been at the forefront of
galvanizing political will to transform African agriculture through
initiatives to expand agricultural production, thwart corruption in
the Nigerian fertilizer industry and exponentially increase the
availability of credit for smallholder farmers across the African
continent.
The 2017 World Food Laureate in
this chat with our correspondent, JIMOH BABATUNDE, who was in Des
Moines, Iowa, reveals the journey so far and what the award means to
him and the African Development Bank (AfDB).
Here is an excerpt.
on what the award means to him
as somebody who grew out of poverty,
who only got really fortunate to have been sent to school by my
father, it is just mind boggling for me coming from that back ground
and being on a global stage receiving award for World Food Prize
tells you that there is a lot of opportunities even for kids of very
poor people , so that means a lot to me.
For millions of rural poor their
aspiration is to make it out of poverty , especially through their
kids there by lay the foundation of a march out of poverty for
generation to come.
My father and grandfather were farmers,
and became so poor farming they had to work as part-time labourers on
other people’s farms. My father told me that farming did not pay.
It was through a benefactor that he made it out of the village to get
the benefit of education. It was that golden opportunity, with a lot
of sacrifices that gave me the benefit of an education, and today, by
God’s grace given me an incredible opportunity to stand on the
global stage to receive the World Food Prize.
We must invest there fore in education
across Africa. Especially across rural Africa . For this is the
fastest way to end generational transfer of poverty.
Secondly is that I feel it is a
recognition for all the work I have done in my career, of course my
vision is always to lift hundreds and millions of people out of
poverty . I don’t do anything for recognition, but I feel delighted
that my work over the years have been recognised .
What it means for me is that there is
so much to do ahead, so even as I am excited I am always looking
forward to the fact that we still have to feed 300 million people in
Africa that are hungry. We still have to turn Africa agriculture
around into a wealth creating sector.
So, if you wish, it puts wings behind
my sail and especially for me and my staff at the AfDB as we lunch
our biggest development efforts in Africa history to feed itself. So,
I feel motivated and encouraged.
On why he studied agriculture
my father wanted me to be a medical
doctor by all means, so I was only 14 and whenever, I took the exams
he will fill the form, Medicine first choice, second choice
Veterinary Medicine and third choice dentistry. So, I have to be a
doctor anyway.
Every time I applied they will say
sorry your grade did not make it to medical school, we will take you
for agriculture. My father who grew up as a poor farmer would say no.
I tried three times and every time I was taken for agriculture . Then
my father said go, God desperately wants you in agriculture.
So, when I finished my PHD in United
States, I was so happy to write my dad a letter and I signed it
Doctor.
Then I was called Doctor from that
time, but when second son graduated from medical school in United
States, my dad was 90 years old and we brought him to United States.
He was trying to ask a question, he turned and said Doctor, I turned
I answered 'Ýes Dad'. He said not you, I mean the real Doctor.
I told my father even the real doctor
will take your medication three times a day only after food, it means
agriculture is still more important.
That is why agriculture is the coolest
thing you can ever find and we at AfDB is accelerating investments to
get younger commercial farmers and agribusiness entrepreneurs into
agriculture.
To succeed with its agriculture, Africa
needs younger and educated people in the sector. They will take
agriculture as a business. They will make agriculture “cool.” I
fully expect the future millionaires and billionaires of Africa to
come from agriculture.
To spur this, the African Development
Bank has launched a youth in agriculture initiative – ENABLE – to
develop the next generation of agripreneurs for Africa. In 2016, we
invested $800 million in this initiative for eight countries.
In 2017, we will reach 15 countries.
Over the next 10 years, the Bank will invest $15 billion to develop
new youth agriculture entrepreneurs.
We will empower women and achieve
greater access to finance for women. No bird can fly with one wing.
Africa will move faster if it achieves equality for women in terms of
access to land, property rights and finance. That’s why the African
Development Bank has launched Affirmative Finance Action for Women in
Africa (AFAWA) to help mobilize $3 billion for businesses of women in
Africa, the majority of whom will be in rural areas, engaged in
agriculture and food businesses.
On the conviction that agriculture can
transform the continent
As a Christian, the Bible always
inspires me. The Bible tells of the story of the Apostle Paul,
preaching the gospel of Jesus Christ and in a vision he heard a
voice, a cry from the people of Macedonia. The voice said, “Come to
Macedonia and help us.” (Acts 9:16). Paul rose up in obedience to
preach the gospel and save the people. I know you all must be
wondering whether you are listening to a preacher today. Of course, I
am a preacher, for sure.
For like Paul, I also hear the voices
rising out of rural Africa, “Come here and help us get out of
poverty.” This “agriculture gospel” was first preached by Dr.
Norman Borlaug, the Nobel Peace Prize-winner, who created the World
Food Prize, for he heard the voices of a billion people and, through
his dedicated work, delivered a green revolution across Asia that fed
a billion people.
Dr. Borlaug was always a huge
inspiration for me. But one moment in particular stands out in our
relationship. It was in 2006, as we both walked the streets of New
York on our way to the Rockefeller Foundation. He gently put his hand
on my shoulder and asked, “Akin, do you play football?” I
wondered why he would ask such a question, out of the blue, given
that we were discussing agriculture and how to feed Africa.
Unsure of what he was getting at, I
politely said, yes, I play soccer. He then proceeded, now with
deliberateness in his voice: “You see, in soccer, you can never
believe you can win, unless you score the first goal. Akin, I want
you to go out there and score goals for agriculture in Africa. Then
Africa will believe it can win with agriculture.” It was such a
defining moment for me.
I am proud to be a disciple of Norman
Borlaug to preach the new “agriculture gospel” across Africa. The
new agriculture gospel is simple: to lift millions of people out of
poverty, agriculture must become a business. For in agriculture as a
business lies the hope of economic prosperity for Africa.
Why Africa still finds it difficult to
feed itself
as a father you can never leave your
kids when it is time for dinner and tell them to go and feed in your
neighbours' house. That is not a responsible father and I don’t
think Africa has any business importing food.
God loves Africa, God has given Africa
so much, we have great sunshine, we have lots of water, cheap labour.
Take a look at the savannah of Africa,
Africa has today 600 millions of very good land that can be
cultivated we need urgent action on unlocking the vast potential of
the African savannah.
With an estimated area of 600 million
hectares, of which 400 million hectares is cultivatable, the savannah
of Africa remain the world’s largest underutilized agricultural
zone.
Less than 10% of the savannah are under
cultivation. Yet, the savannahs helped Brazil to dominate the global
food supply in soybean, maize and dairy; and the savannahs helped
north-east Thailand to become the largest exporter of rice and
cassava globally.
So, I feel sometimes that we are like
in a situation we see gold , but we pass it by thinking it is dirt
and I think that is how we are looking at agriculture.
Agriculture is what is going to turn
Africa around , through agricultural industrialization.
Yes, I have every confidence that if
Africa does agriculture as a business , invest properly, Africa can
not only feed itself, Africa can and should feed the world. I am
convinced.
To feed Africa and put Africa in a good
position to help in feeding the world, the African Development Bank
is launching the Transformation of African Savannah Initiative
(TASI), in partnership with Brazil, Japan, the World Bank and other
partners.
What can be done in terms of policies
I think in terms of policy, the African
leaders should not abandon their farmers. Every nation that has
actually transform itself in agriculture has given strong support to
its farmers.
Sometimes I look at African farmers
they are so poor and they are the most under supported farmers in the
world . They are like little wooden boats that you put on the
Mediterranean sea and you asked them to just survive on their own.
The first thing is support farmers,
support the private sector in agriculture, recognise that agriculture
is not just about government, the private sector has to be involved.
Integration is very important because
Africa size of our market is big and we are not trading enough with
each other. We are actually importing more food instead of actually
selling food from one country to another and that is why at AFDB, we
are talking about regional integration by investing in roads , ports
and rails to be able to connect countries to each other and move good
and services all across.
In terms of financial inclusion the
power of mobile phone is amazing, it allows Africans do things in
terms of savings, money transfer, insurance, access to health and
education.
Look at what Epesa in Kenya has done.
$26 billion goes through that platform every single year. Look at
what the mobile phone has done in Nigeria when I used it to end the
over 40years corruption in the fertilizer sector as Minister of
Agriculture .
We used the mobile phone to reach over
50million people to access seeds and fertilizers in four years
period.
Today, we are scaling it up into 30
African countries, so I think policies are important , larger
regional size of markets and access to finance is critical.
We must start tapping into this
potential market to create wealth by strongly supporting farmers,
especially millions of smallholder farmers. I have never seen any
farmer that wants to be poor, and neither have I met a subsistence
farmer. What I have seen, are hard-working farmers, who simply are
poor because they lack access to technologies to boost their
production, without access to affordable finance, unable to turn
their land assets to wealth, abandoned by political leaders, and left
to fend for themselves, like a boat left to drift alone at sea.
Yet, like every one of us, deep down in
their hearts is an undying hope that they will leave behind a better
future for their children; that their children will not have to
suffer the indignities of poverty. The hope of millions of
marginalized Africans is that, through a good education, their own
children will escape from the traps and clutches of poverty.
The main highway out of poverty for
farmers lies in having the right political leadership, one that is
able to take bold decisions to unshackle millions desperately looking
for help and an opportunity to create wealth.
It was this search for political
leaders that’ll stand up and be counted that led me and my
colleagues at the Rockefeller Foundation, to initiate the Africa
Fertilizer Summit, backed by eminent global leaders, with the
inspiration of then President Obasanjo of Nigeria.
It was the largest effort in Africa’s
history to galvanize leaders for agriculture. At the age of 92 years,
Dr. Borlaug showed up in Abuja, Nigeria, calling on leaders to rise
up.
They did. The result was the adoption
of the need for an African green revolution by 40 Heads of States and
Governments. We turned back 30 years of push back on the use of
fertilizers in Africa.
But we won’t get anywhere unless
farmers in rural areas are able to access farm inputs. I realized
that millions of farmers were unable to obtain access to improved
seeds and fertilizers because rural input markets were poorly
developed or absent in most cases. It was easier to find soda pop in
rural Africa than farm inputs.
This led me, while at the Rockefeller
Foundation, to develop and work with several partners to roll out a
major program to develop agro-dealer networks, a network of rural
farm input retail shops across rural Africa. And we needed several
thousands of them per country to ensure no farmer travelled more than
3 kilometers’ radius to find seeds and fertilizers. Guarantee
facilities were established in several African countries to improve
the access of agro dealers to trade finance in order to stock up on
farm inputs.
The initiative triggered a revolution,
unleashing a wave of rural farm input shops run by the private
sector, and successfully getting farm inputs to the doorsteps of
farmers.
With over $150 million in funding to
AGRA, we began to roll out these farm input shops. Today, millions of
farmers can now easily gain access to farm inputs, boosting farm
production, triggering rapid growth of seed and fertilizer companies.
Always, I was inspired by Dr. Borlaug’s words: “Take it to the
farmers.”
The fact is, we could get even greater
results if farmers receive strong support from governments, just as
they did when Norman Borlaug led the green revolution in Asia.
I am an advocate for subsidies for
farmers in Africa. Many had written off subsidies in Africa, as
corruption-laden and inefficient. And they were right, but they
missed the crucial point: the problem was not the subsidy, but the
system that delivered them.
Back in 2004, while at Rockefeller
Foundation, I helped to spearhead with other colleagues, including
Pedro Sanchez, World Food Prize-winner, and Jeffery Sachs, the design
of the subsidy program for Malawi, which was experiencing the worst
drought in its history.
Despite massive doubts, the government
bought into the plan and the subsidy program was rolled out. Donors
lined up, after the initial hoopla. It was a huge success. Within
three months, Malawi became food self-sufficient, produced more food
than it needed and exported 400,000 metric tons of maize to Zimbabwe.
A few years later, I faced a similar
situation in Kenya in 2007, while working at AGRA. I noticed that 2.5
million poor farmers were food insecure and had no access to farm
inputs to produce. Convinced we could solve the problem, I got a plan
developed, but had to convince donors. Donors did not buy into it,
due to the usual bias against subsidies.
In my meetings later with the Minister
of Agriculture and the Permanent Secretary of Agriculture, they
bought into the program, so the “Kilimo Plus” program was
launched, which successfully boosted access to farm inputs to over
one million farmers nationwide.
On Obasanjo and Jonathan's support
When I became minister of Agriculture
in Nigeria, I went to President Obasanjo, who nominated me as
minister, for wisdom. He said Akin as you take up this job there is
just one thing that is so difficult, the fertilizer sector. It is so
corrupt and risky, so do anything but whatever you do , dont go there
because it is very messy.
I looked at him and thanked him,
because I considered him a father, I thought I will get the courage
of a general, but I went home and told my wife that we will fail
except we end corruption in fertilizer in Nigeria.
That was how we developed the
electronic wallet system that we used to delivered seeds and
fertilizers to over 50million farmers.
We ended the corruption of 40 years in
90 days. Nigeria saw over 21million tonnes of additional food, we
impacted lives of over 75 million people.
I went back to Obasanjo, he said you
did not listen to me but I am glad you did not.
I want to say I would not have
succeeded without big political support from President Jonathan.
Without his political support , it would not have been possible. For
such a reform, you need to have the backing of your president. It is
not about stepping on people's toes .
I told the president we were going to
walk on people's head. He had my back covered and for that I will for
ever be grateful.
I want to thank President Obasanjo for
nominating me a minister. I want to say something about president
Obasanjo and my wife that gets me into trouble.
He calls me Akin 45 and my wife, Grace
55. you may not understand what that means. He said 55% of my success
is due to my wife and the rest is mine. And when I won the World Food
prize yesterday, I went to him and said Sir, I have been at 45% for a
long time, what am I now? He said 46%.
On technologies
We stand at a crucial moment to tap
into technologies, innovations, youth populations, and a rising need
to diversify African economies in order to launch our biggest effort
to fully unlock the potential of African agriculture.
So, we know what works; what we have
got do is scale up these and many other successful experiences across
Africa.
That’s why the African Development
Bank has committed to investing $24 billion in agriculture over the
next ten years. And we have already started with concrete
investments.
The African Development Bank, AGRA,
Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation and the World Bank are developing
an exciting initiative – Technologies for African Agricultural
Transformation, also known as TAAT – to mobilize about $1 billion
to drive scaling up of agricultural technologies across Africa.
Our goal is to “take technologies to
the farmers.” Just like Norman Borlaug asked us to score more goals
for agriculture in Africa. Our goal is to reach 150 million farmers,
while building private sector value chains to create markets pull for
farmers.
On malnutrition
We will tackle the challenge of
malnutrition in Africa. That’s why the African Development Bank –
working with Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation, Dangote Foundation,
Big Win Philanthropy and the Global Panel on Food Systems and
Nutrition – has launched African Leaders for Nutrition, to help
bring political accountability to address the issue of malnutrition
and stunting in Africa. Our goal is to help build grey matter
infrastructure in Africa and end stunting, which currently affects
some 54 million children. We will focus sharply on helping to scale
up bio-fortified crops across the continent to address malnutrition.
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