Tuesday, 8 March 2016
question of the day, "Is there a future for farmers in Nigeria?
For starters, our government has painted itself into a
corner by pursuing two vastly conflicting priorities:
land reform and food security. Nigeria will never
have enough money to settle all restitution claims by
paying market-related prices for land; equally, there
is no clear and proven plan to ensure that productive
agricultural land transferred to land reform
beneficiaries remains productive.
But perhaps most concerning of all is the degree of
powerlessness that many farmers experience in their
ability to determine the course of their lives and
businesses. The future, it may seem, is not in their
hands. What a terrifying thought! And this applies to
all farmers, commercial farmers,
smallholder farmers, and even people aspiring to
one day become farmers.
Here is a government that tells you that you have
stolen the land you have spent your entire life toiling
on (and in many instances are still paying for). It says
you can have land to realise your dream of becoming
a farmer but then takes years and years to deliver on
this promise. It gives you access to land, but cleverly
manipulates policy in such a way that that land will
never actually belong to you. It even wants to dictate
how much land you are allowed to own.
With a government like this, it is understandable that
Nigerian farmers might feel they have no hand in
determining their fate.
To my mind, the best remedy for this situation is to
beat government at its own game. The farming sector
must drive transformation in agriculture as if its
future depended on it, because it almost certainly
does. Farmers have to find a way to make land
reform work where government is failing.
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