Securing livelihoods, land and natural resource rights through partnerships between small-scale...

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Securing livelihoods, land and natural resource rights through partnerships between small-scale farmers and outside investors: Lessons from IFAD Steven Jonckheere International Fund for Agricultural Development Land and Poverty Conference, World Bank, March 2014

Transcript of Securing livelihoods, land and natural resource rights through partnerships between small-scale...

Page 1: Securing livelihoods, land and natural resource rights through partnerships between small-scale farmers and outside investors: Lessons from IFAD Steven.

Securing livelihoods, land and natural resource rights through partnerships between small-scale farmers and outside investors: Lessons from IFAD

Steven Jonckheere

International Fund for Agricultural DevelopmentLand and Poverty Conference, World Bank, March 2014

Page 2: Securing livelihoods, land and natural resource rights through partnerships between small-scale farmers and outside investors: Lessons from IFAD Steven.

Context

Renewed interest in

agricultural investment

Large-scale acquisitions of

farmland

Polarised debates about “land grabbing”

Alternative ways of structuring agricultural

investments

Page 3: Securing livelihoods, land and natural resource rights through partnerships between small-scale farmers and outside investors: Lessons from IFAD Steven.

IFAD and agricultural investments

• Identifying private-sector models that strengthen land and natural resource rights and boost agricultural development & introducing project models with private-sector investment

• Key principles:- Smallholder family agriculture is a business- Overcoming gender inequalities and empowering

women- Land is fundamental to the lives of poor rural people- Deepening engagement with the private sector

Page 4: Securing livelihoods, land and natural resource rights through partnerships between small-scale farmers and outside investors: Lessons from IFAD Steven.

Assessing value sharing

• Economic viability is a precondition for agricultural investments to benefit the local population

• Focus on the way in which business models share value between the business partners

• Four closely interlinked criteria

Value sharing

Ownership

Voice

Risk

Reward

Page 5: Securing livelihoods, land and natural resource rights through partnerships between small-scale farmers and outside investors: Lessons from IFAD Steven.

Examples from IFAD supported projects

Page 6: Securing livelihoods, land and natural resource rights through partnerships between small-scale farmers and outside investors: Lessons from IFAD Steven.

Swaziland – Lower Usuthu Smallholder Irrigation Project

Business model

- Sugar cane- Nucleus estate & contract farming- Smallholders, Ubombo Mill & Government

Ownership - Ubombo (nucleus, shares)- Smallholders (land sharing, farmer companies)

Voice - National (SSA)- Mill (mill group committee)- Farm (farmer company)

Risk - Smallholder (production, rejection, price)- Ubombo (marketing, price)

Reward - Smallholder (income,services, food security, paid jobs)- Ubombo (supply, sales, co-investment)

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São Tomé & Principe - Participatory Smallholder Agriculture and Artisanal Fisheries Development Programme

Business model

- Organic and fair-trade cocoa- Contract farming- Smallholders, Kaoka, CaféDirect & Government

Ownership - Smallholders (land distribution, cooperatives)- Companies

Voice - Associations and cooperatives- Forum for community needs

Risk - Smallholder (production, rejection, post-harvest)- Companies (quantity, quality, market)

Reward - Smallholder (sole buyer, income, services, self-esteem)- Companies (supply, sales)

Page 8: Securing livelihoods, land and natural resource rights through partnerships between small-scale farmers and outside investors: Lessons from IFAD Steven.

Lessons learned

• No single model emerges as the best possible option• Willingness of the company to engage with more

inclusive business models as a genuine economic component of their business

• Negotiating power of smallholders- Security of local land rights (engaged in agriculture production

directly/agricultural production carried out by agribusiness)

• Smallholders’ access to information• Monitor impact at household level• IFAD’s role

- Act as broker and facilitator- Strengthen the capacity of host governments and smallholder

groups to negotiate and manage contracts with agribusiness- Policy dialogue and knowledge sharing