EVENTS
International panel discussion on agricultural
and rural development: Agricultural and Rural Development.
Berlin, 13 May 2005.
Halving hunger is possible. The world is ready to invest in rural
development. With these words at the international panel discussion
entitled Agricultural and Rural Development held
on 13 May at GTZ-Haus Berlin, Pedro A. Sanchez expressed his confidence.
Sanchez is the coordinator of the UN Millennium Project Hunger Task
Force. He qualified his statements however, by adding that more financial
support was needed to sustainably fight the silent tsunamis,
which he used to refer to the 200,000 people who die of hunger every
day in Africa.
Sanchez said that US$ 110 per capita and year were required to achieve
the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs). The donors share of this
amount is US$ 7, according to Sanchez, which is two to three times more
than is currently being made available. Although only 20 percent of
the per capita amount is available for developing rural areas and agriculture,
it is a key factor in achieving the MDGs. According to Pedro Sanchez,
Agriculture is the engine for economic development.
Conversely, an underdeveloped agricultural sector is a genuine development
constraint if not enough food can be produced for the population: Hunger
is an obstacle to productivity. Its impact on the gross national product
of a country is huge, said Kostas Stamoulis, chief of the agriculture
sector of the UN Food and Agriculture Organisation (FAO). He called
for politics to invest more in agriculture, especially in small-farmer
structures. This would sustainably increase the productivity of
the entire rural area.
Uschi Eid, BMZ Parliamentary State Secretary, proposed that agricultural
subsidies that distort trade be removed and redirected to rural development
in the partner countries, where they should be earmarked for special
purposes. Eid also felt that there was a problem with the political
priorities of the partner governments themselves. The fact that for
the most part, their regular voters live in urban areas means that rural
areas are less relevant for them. In order to fight poverty, the
national development strategies in the partner countries have to put
the topic of agriculture at the very top of their agendas. But
that means that we also need to keep to these development strategies.
The people know what they need, but we dont ask them. I dont
know whether a farmer in eastern Sudan understands a German expert.
We need to be more sensitive. Sometimes we miss things. We dont
need to give them a voice. We need to listen to them, Eid concluded.
Further information: http://www.gtz.de/en/aktuell/7429.htm