Monday, 11 November 2013

Place Youth Entrepreneurship at the centre of CAADP’s Green Revolution!




If you were to speak about any trendy agricultural issue in Africa and hope to get any attention by the power that be you would have to locate it within the broader context of African Union’s NEPAD flagship programme known as CAADP and the call by United Nations’ Secretary General in 2004 to effectively turn the 21st Century to be the period of African Green Revolution! In the recent past, various development reports have sought to encourage meaningful engagement of youth across value chains through global, continental, regional and national policy frameworks. One of such reports is FANRPAN 2012 Country Case Studies on Youth and Agricultural Policies. The report present a unique population profile, with 44% of its population under the age 15 in 2006 making sub-Saharan Africa (SSA) the youngest region of the world. Today, two out of three inhabitants of SSA are under 25 years of age. SSA is home to over 200 million young people, who are employed primarily in agriculture, where they account for 65% of the total employment.
 
On the other hand, the farmers that these vulnerable youth generation work under are fast aging without any succession plan to ensure productivity continues at an improved scale. For example, an average age of a farmer in South Africa range between 56 – 62 years and average life expectancy is 57.1 years (54.9 for male and 59.1 for female) (StatsSA, 2011).   

According to the same FANRPAN report, about 40 percent of the total unemployed are youth in Africa - 70 percent of these live in rural areas. Those who are employed have insecure work arrangements, characterized by low productivity and meagre earnings. Among the youth, females and the rural youth face particularly stronger challenges especially because of early motherhood and lack of educational and job opportunities.
 
Youth face challenges brought about by limited access to resources, healthcare, education, training, employment and economic opportunities. Many youth remain marginalized, disconnected or excluded from the opportunities that globalization offers. 

There is obviously a compelling evidence of ageing farmer population across the continent which must be addressed to ensure continuity and sustainability in agriculture production. The age gap is made worse by research and technological gap that has tended to undermine many efforts to transform and rebrand the face of Africa’s agricultural knowledge system.  Thus, young Africans are the key to African agriculture development. However, many are unable to fulfill their potential because of poverty, hunger, poor health and lack of education.

It would seem true that for Africa to achieve food security, young people must be regarded as critical agricultural players who need and deserve special attention, support and follow-up. By promoting entrepreneurship culture among youth in agriculture as we should do, it is highly possible that we will, in the process, assist in improving household food security, creation of employment opportunities particularly in rural areas, and consequently reduce rural migration to urban areas. 

I must therefore agree with a view expressed in The New Harvest: Agricultural Innovation in Africa  that the ability of the continent to feed itself will depend largely on the extent to which it is able to harness the world’s scientific and technological knowledge and put it to local uses.

The question we are asking and working towards responding as part of concerned global citizens regarding food security and future of agriculture is: if we all say the future of all modern society depends on youth, ‘what is it then that you are doing to promote the  culture of entrepreneurship among the agriyouth generation in order to ‘harness the world’s scientific and technological knowledge and put it to local uses’?

I’m pleased to share that the ICT4Ag13 Conference in Kigali, Rwanda got the organizer, a multi-regional agricultural organization committing to a sustained entrepreneurship programme that will target and benefit youth in developing nations.  I’m also humbled to share that a Comprehensive and Reviewable 3 Year Entrepreneurship Programme aimed at filling the threatening aging farmer gap, lack of entrepreurship culture and institutional barriers that impede agricultural productivity is underway in South Africa. The programme will have a strong emphasis on commercialization of rural Agricultural Activities, uplifting small-scale farmers and ‘agripreneurs’ into viable business enterprises for sustainable local economic development. For this to happen, South Africans industry stakeholders know well that they need to provide access to reproductive infrastructures such as land, roads, electricity, marketing facilities, irrigation facilities, small-scale agro-processing technologies, credit institutions, specialized agricultural careers across the value chains etc.

From youth-driven innovation perspective that underpins the work we do, there is no doubt that opportunities will have to be created in the value chains, from farmers, manufactures, wholesalers, retailers, food services, and service providers, like storage companies, transport companies, banks, and other institutions. For our part as Commercial Agricultural Youth Chamber (CAYC), we are excited and ready to offer further support such as securing buy-in from industry players, resource mobilization, identification and screening of beneficiaries, leadership and entrepreneurship training and mentoring, market linkages, Business to business linkages, public private partnerships, farmer-to-farmer exchanges and institutional linkages , coordination, monitoring and evaluation, results measurement and any other task possible. 

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Friday, 8 November 2013

Videos

Saturday, 19 October 2013

Agriculture, Youth, Policies and Mechanisms

Mr. Obert Mathivha, CAYC Managing Director conducted a study whose purpose was:

a) To look into available literatures in South Africa and present the findings of the current and emerging policies as well as related Initiatives regarding the mainstreaming of youth development in the agricultural value chains,
b) To identify gaps, and opportunities for complementing efforts being undertaken within the context of existiong policy and strategic frameworks and make appropriate policy recommendations.

For more information on this please check it out here

All Reports here

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Thursday, 17 October 2013

CAADP-RSA YOUTH WORKSHOP


Commercial AgriYouth Chamber (CAYC) in collaboration with DAFF, ARC and NEPAD Planning and Coordinating Agency. YPARD is coordinating CAADP National Consultative Workshop to canvass youth voice in the procecess laeding to South Africa adopting a Comprehensive CAADP Compact and ultimately long-term Agricultural Investment Plan. The event is scheduled for 13th - 14th November 2013, will take place at ARC Hatfield Head Office, will be attended by 60 young agricultural professionals across 9 provinces. 

WHAT IS CAADP? In July 2003, the African Heads of States, South African included, endorsed the African Union-NEPAD’s flagship initiative known as Comprehensive Africa Agriculture Development Programme (CAADP) as the continent’s framework for agriculture–led growth and development to address food insecurity. CAADP takes a multi-stakeholder and collaborative approach to development hence Consultative Stakeholder Workshops to solicit inputs from various constituencies that will ultimately feed into its final products, the CAADP National Compact and Long Term Agricultural Investment Plan.  You may want to find out more by droping us a line on: agriyouth@gmail.com 



To learn more about CAADP you are at liberty to consult this link here

Learn more about CAYC participation in CAADP here 
  
African youth speaks here

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