Feature from Ethiopia: Open Market Challenges
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Open Market Challenges Commercializing agriculture—and creating a “new farmer” as the government aims to do—depends on several factors: improving farmers’ skills; giving them more and better technology, such as modern seeds, fertilizer, and irrigation; and opening up the market to the farmer. Our research shows that farmers are willing to innovate and take risks only when the environment is right. Inputs have to be available, knowledge must be transferred through private actors or non-governmental organizations (NGOs), and markets have to be able to absorb the production.
The need to improve markets is a daunting challenge in a country where both the roads and telecommunications structures are among the weakest in the world. The private sector too is just emerging after being nearly eliminated by the previous socialist regime. Both Ingida and Getachew have been beneficiaries of the government’s efforts to help farmers get a better deal in the market through the establishment of marketing cooperatives. But, even while these farmers acknowledge that the cooperative has helped them, the cooperative system is not without its challenges. While helping farmers to bulk up their produce and gain market power through collective bargaining, the cooperative still has to face the market. If the market is weak, the trader is unreliable, or the co-op itself is not market-savvy, then the farmers may not be better off. Page 1 - Research That Listens Page 2 - Listening to Local Voices Page 3 - Open Market Challenges Page 4 - Trading with Trust Page 5 - Commodity Exchanges PERSPECTIVES HOME: Farm to Table |



