What is AFMA, what does the association do and whom does it represent?
The Africa Farm Management Association (AFMA) was first formed in the 1990s in Zimbabwe by stakeholders in farm and agribusiness management. Its mandate is to take care of the interests of farmers and commercial agriculture practitioners. I was elected president of the association in 2011 and played a part in reviving it after it went dormant in 2004.
At AFMA’s ninth conference, held in Cape Town last month, there were more than 150 delegates from, among others, Tanzania, Kenya, Rwanda, Nigeria, Mauritius, Burundi, Ethiopia, Cameroon and South Africa. The role of the association is to come up with solutions that can inform policy decisions by African governments that will help improve agricultural production and commercialise farming activities in Africa.
AFMA creates a forum for dialogue among key agriculture stakeholders so that they can share knowledge and experience from different parts of Africa. We believe that African problems can be solved by Africans themselves. For too long, people have thought that solutions to Africa’s development challenges can come only from the developed world. But we believe it’s a matter of bringing the right players in Africa together so they can share the best practices from their countries. In so doing, they will provide development solutions for other countries that might face similar challenges.
Is there space in the future for subsistence, smallholder and commercial farmers in Africa, or do you see a future where all farming is done on a large scale?
Countries in the rest of the world have done much better in developing land and adopting technologies to utilise as much of the arable land available as possible, and to improve productivity. In Africa, a lot of land has not been put to useful production.
Although we have extremes as we move across Africa, in some parts, such as South Africa, farmers are doing as well as those in developed countries, if not better.
What positive developments have taken place in Africa over the past decade?
What can SA learn from other African countries about agricultural development and vice versa?
South Africa can learn about the role that smallholder farming can play in uplifting the poor. On my visit to the country, I drove past a big squatter camp on the outskirts of Cape Town. The people who live there also deserve a good share in the national economy and one way to involve them is as smallholder farmers. They don’t need very large farms; it’s possible to have an economically viable enterprise for those sections of society that have been marginalised, on very small parcels of land.
They just need to get started and be equipped with the technical know-how needed to function as farmers.
Do you think Africa and Africans have the drive and will to really see agriculture on the continent develop to its full potential over the next few decades?
A lot of effort needs to be made to persuade African governments to invest more in agriculture. Out of the 44 countries that agreed to the Maputo Declaration that 10% of each country’s budget should be allocated to agriculture, only nine have achieved this goal.