Response on Concern Worldwide’s “Unheard Voices” campaign
May 2008
Thank you for your letter to Douglas Alexander about Concern Worldwide’s
campaign “Unheard Voices”. I am replying as the Minister who leads on the issues
raised.
The Department for International Development (DFID) believes that smallholder
farmers, if properly supported, could significantly contribute to reducing
hunger by growing food for their families and the immediate community. DFID
understands the critical role agriculture plays in poor countries to promote
sustainable growth and contribute to Millennium Development Goal 1, halving
poverty and halving the number of hungry people.
DFID’s agriculture policy addresses many of the constraints to smallholder
farmers’ development. This includes: access to fertile land, fertilizer and
seeds; developing and disseminating appropriate technologies; supporting markets
and trade; putting in place national policies and strategies that focus on rural
and agricultural growth; and ensuring farmers have a voice and a say in their
own development.
On agricultural development, DFID works directly in more than 20 countries, is
supported by nearly 50 professionals, and spends £120 million a year. For
example, in Malawi, DFID’s support to the Government’s fertiliser and seed
subsidy programme has contributed to a harvest surplus of 1 million tonnes. In
Rwanda, DFID has supported the development of the Government’s national strategy
for agricultural transformation. And in Zimbabwe a £10 million a year programme
ensures 1.5 million people are benefiting from dramatic increases in
agricultural productivity under DFID-funded NGO programmes. (We cannot work
through the Zimbabwean Government). We also provide substantial help to
agriculture indirectly, for example through our support for rural roads,
irrigation and land reform.
Over the last 20 years, the development of new crop varieties which are
appropriate to small farm producers has hugely improved agricultural yields, and
poor consumers have been the main beneficiaries. DFID has recently announced a
further £400 million to be spent on agricultural research over the next five
years, and will work to ensure that the benefits of this work can be taken up
promptly by all farmers, including smallholders. This research will also look at
how climate change will affect smallholder farmers and recommend appropriate
adaptation strategies.
Developing country governments are also placing more and more importance on
agriculture and rural development. In South Asia, the Governments of India and
Nepal are committed to developing a better understanding of the impact of
climate change on the sector. And in Africa, the 2003 Maputo Declaration
committed signatories to spending 10% of national budgets on the sector by 2009;
a number of countries are already achieving this target. We welcome this, and
much of the aid that we give to developing country governments is through Direct
Budgetary Support. This allows those governments to allocate our funds to their
national priorities.
An increasing amount of DFID’s funding is now going through multilateral
channels, such as the EC and the World Bank, both of which are doubling the
amount that they are committing to agriculture. This year’s World Development
Report, published by the World Bank, supported by DFID through funding and
technical inputs, is devoted to the subject of agriculture and development. It
highlights the need to provide support to smallholder farmers, and to provide
alternative income opportunities in rural areas. DFID is also a leading
supporter of the Comprehensive African Agriculture Development Programme, CAADP,
an Africa-led initiative looking to find the best ways of addressing the primary
MDG target of poverty and hunger.
I welcome the interest taken by Concern supporters in these issues, and can
assure you that DFID will consult widely when undertaking the full review of its
agriculture policy, which is due to take place later in the year.
I hope this is helpful.
Gareth Thomas
Parliamentary Under Secretary of State for International Development
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