Publications /
Book / Report

Back
Food Security and Agri-Food Policies in the New South
Authors
July 31, 2024

Millions are severely malnourished in a world where there is enough for all. Hunger and malnutrition stalk more than 3.1 billion people. Yet, widespread hunger in all its forms is a problem which has been largely solved at the macro level in today’s high-income, industrialized countries. Their “escape from hunger and premature death” is a fairly recent phenomenon. It began around 300 years ago, continued for most of the 20th century and is still ongoing today. The problems faced by poor countries nowadays are similar to those faced by today’s wealthy countries for over two centuries.

What can we in the New South learn from the achievements and struggles of different countries around the world on how to achieve food security for all? This book is about what it has taken to achieve food security in successful countries, what lessons we can derive from both successes and failures in agri-food development worldwide, and what opportunities and challenges lie ahead.

The main message is that such achievements require that the vicious circle between undernutrition and low agricultural productivity be broken. It takes sustained government commitment to increase the productivity and incomes of the rural poor by integrating their agricultural and rural economy in a sustained growth process that transforms both agriculture and the overall economy. Such a decades-long process is necessary but not sufficient, as it needs to be complemented by investment in areas outside the agri-food sector, such as in human capital, a social safety net to strengthen the productivity and resilience of people, in an environment threatened by climate change.

Governments must build a business-friendly environment within a stable macro framework and invest in the macro, trade and agri-food sectors, so that farmers themselves want to invest in the productivity of their farms because they view it as profitable. Since climate change is challenging the known techniques of an already risky sector, governments must invest in research, extension and knowledge dissemination so that farmers especially, the majority of whom are smallholders, can thrive and be resilient and sustainable. More broadly, investment in human capital and in the generation of a knowledge base, including the data needed to monitor, evaluate and guide policies, is essential for driving a knowledge-intensive and inclusive process of economic transformation. Success is within reach to the extent leadership’s vision of a food secure country is implemented by competent administrations committed to the public good.

RELATED CONTENT

  • Authors
    Sang-Hyun Lee
    Amjad T. Assi
    Bassel Daher
    October 5, 2020
    Our Senior Fellow Rabi Mohtar has co-authored with our economist, Fatima Ezzahra Mengoub along other researchers a research paper entitled « A Water-Energy-Food Nexus approach for conducting trade-off analysis: Morocco’s phosphate industry in the Khouribga region » in Hydrology and Earth System Sciences Journal (Volume 24, Issue 10). The study objective was to develop and use the Water-Energy-Food Nexus Phosphate (WEF-P) Tool to evaluate the impact of Morocco’s phosphate industry ...
  • Authors
    September 4, 2020
    South Africa shows that being food self-sufficient is a far cry from being food secure when poverty is extensive, the majority of people suffer from the “quadruple burden of disease”1 , the economy is highly unequal, and when improving the quality of the public health infrastructure remains a major challenge despite successive governments’ efforts. The major factors that undermine food security and health in South Africa are directly or indirectly due to the long history of social ...
  • June 25, 2020
    We are living through unprecedented times. The COVID-19 pandemic threatens not only our health, but the very foundation of life itself: our food security. Now more than ever, we are forced to rethink our food security as we witness the widespread dislocations to our food system, forcing millions to beg for food for the first time. During normal times, our world produces enough nutritious food for all but millions still go hungry every day. Why does this happen and what can be done t ...
  • Authors
    October 30, 2019
    Subsidizing fertilizer prices has been a popular policy tool to increase fertilizer use, but should it be? The main message of this Policy Brief is that it should not be, despite its appeal to politicians and recipient farmers alike. Instead, policy makers should seriously consider a holistic approach to promoting fertilizer. A holistic approach has the potential of effectively addressing a range of key interlocking constraints which condemn smallholders to low input, low productivi ...
  • Authors
    Tharcisse Guedegbe
    September 27, 2019
    This paper is about the basic principles which should guide fertilizer policy for smallholder agriculture in sub-Saharan Africa It is not about detailed country-specific prescriptions on the “how” of policy. This important task should constitute the substance of detailed country studies. The overarching goal here is to use fertilizer to spearhead and sustain an African Green Revolution (GR). In this paper, fertilizer use is not considered as an end in itself, but as a necessary mean ...
  • Authors
    Holger Hoff
    Sajed Aqel Alrahaife
    Rana El Hajj
    Kerstin Lohr
    Nadim Farajalla
    Kerstin Fritzsche
    Guy Jobbins
    Gül Özerol
    Robert Schultz
    Anne Ulrich
    May 13, 2019
    Adopting an integrated approach to the management and governance of natural resources including land, water and energy is seen as an effective way to improve the sphere of production while respecting the environment. Fatima Ezzahra Mengoub, economist at the Policy Center for the New South, was invited by Stockholm Environment Institute, alongside other prestigious research centers with expertise in environmental studies, to co-author this research paper and share her analysis of th ...
  • Authors
    Under the direction of
    Philippe Chalmin
    April 9, 2019
    Commodity prices were once again marked by significant volatility in 2017 and 2018. While there are many economic factors to explain this, politics were also present—trade tensions between China and the United States and, more generally, a rise in uncertainties—weighing upon the global macroeconomic outlook and the ‘dynamism of the markets’. Africa, which has countries with strong growth rates, has, however, been able to show solid economic performance, and this trajectory is not li ...
  • Authors
    Eric Ntumba
    Hafsat Abiola
    Mbuih Zukane
    Mohamed Benaïssa
    Paulo Antonio Paranagua
    Soukeyna Ndiaye Ba
    Tharcisse Guèdègbé
    Yassine Msadfa
    Younes Abouyoub
    Youssef Mahmoud
    December 13, 2018
    The yearly Atlantic Currents publication aims to provide a detailed analysis and a fresh perspective about ongoing cultural, economic, political and security dynamics that are shaping the wider Atlantic area today. Launched in December during the Atlantic Dialogues Conference, previous editions explored ways to change mental maps and examined promising opportunities for the African continent. The chapters in this edition of the Atlantic Currents aim to cover key issues and choke po ...
  • October 18, 2018
    L'agriculture intelligente face au climat (AIC) est une approche qui permet de définir les mesures nécessaires pour transformer et réorienter les systèmes agricoles dans le but de souteni ...
  • August 1, 2018
    “This article has been originally published in 'Morocco in Focus 2018,' the magazine of the Moroccan Embassy in New Delhi, India on the occasion of the Morocco National Day 2018.” Introduction In an article published last year, the author stressed the role of partnership between Morocco and India for the inclusive growth of small farmers. There is no doubt that agriculture remains a major instrument for human development both in India and in Africa. Several international reports h ...