• AfDB President, Akinwumi Adesina |
Despite
producing 50 per cent of the world’s cassava, Nigeria exports less than one per
cent of its produce, the African Development Bank (AfDB) has said.
The bank
said Nigeria produced 53 million tons of cassava in 2013 valued at $16billion
but exported cassava produce valued at $1 million. Its Country Director in
Nigeria, Dr. Ousmane Dore, who spoke in Abuja yesterday lamented that women got
lesser returns despite contributing the more. He spoke during the launch of a
report titled: Economic Empowerment of African Women through Equitable
Participation in Agricultural Value Chains carried out by the office of the
Special Envoy on Gender (SEOG) and the Department for Agriculture and
Agro-industry (OSAN) commissioned by the bank.
He said:
“Nigeria produces 50 per cent of the world’s cassava but export less than one
per cent of the product. “The study mentions Nigeria as Africa’s top producer
of cassava with 53 million tons in 2013 – about 20 per cent of global cassava
(approximately $16 billion in value), but only exported $1 million worth of
cassava.“The global production of cassava was worth $51 billion in 2013 – the
highest production value ($35 billion) of the sub –sectors but the lowest
export value (approximately $1-2 million).”
Dr. Dore
said Nigeria, being the largest producer of cassava globally would not mean
anything if the country could not lift women out of poverty. He added
that women get lesser returns despite contributing 70 per cent to the work
force of the sector. He said: “Nigeria is the largest producer of cassava in
the world but that does not mean anything if we don’t lift women out of
poverty. I want us to be the largest processor of cassava in the world as well
and this can be done by adding value to our products and moving women upwards
the value chain.
“In
Nigeria, women contribute close to 70 per cent of agricultural work force, but
yet, get far less of the accruing returns. Also, in spite of their huge labour
investment, productivity is low, and they often have limited roles in decision
making on farms, and ownership of land and other productive assets due to
existing social norms. This has significant negative impact on the family income
and the nation’s GDP at large.
“The report
highlights five major constraints that can limit women’s productivity and full
inclusion into the agricultural economy to include lack of access to assets,
lack of access to financing, limited training, gender –neutral government
policy, and time constraints due to heavy domestic responsibilities.”
He said the
role of women is largely limited to the unskilled parts of production; few own
the land on which they work, they are rarely remunerated for their labour and
often do not control the income generated from the sale of agricultural
produce.
“Our
objective for commissioning the study was for the AfDB to play a decisive role
in contributing to the economic empowerment of African women in agriculture.
“This event is a call for all our esteemed
stakeholders to join forces in a discussion on how to take this work forward,”
he said. AfDB’s
SEOG, Geraldine Fraser –Moleketi, said there are six million smallholder
cassava farmers in Nigeria alone, adding that women accounted for a quarter of
these smallholder farmers but earned only 17 per cent of the income because
their productivity was lower than that of men.
She added
that African women could feed the continent and the world, calling on
governments to close the wide gap in wages and agricultural yields between men
and women if Africa was to achieve full economic transformation.“Women’s
presence in the agricultural labour force is significant at 50 per cent, and
there really is no better overlapping opportunity to support women’s economic
empowerment and strengthen a critical sector on the continent. “The
recommendations of the report are clear. We need to grow agribusiness
entrepreneurs (commercial farmers, processing, export); improve productivity
and incomes; creating niche products within the four sectors we have
prioritised – cocoa, cotton, cassava, and coffee.
“I believe that being ambitious about how we implement the
interventions identified in this report could change the face of agriculture in
Africa and empower millions of women,” she said.
Source THE NATION
No comments:
Post a Comment