Malawi changes tack

Malawi has long been the posterchild for the subsidize-maize-fertiliser-and-all-will-be-well school of agricultural development. The success of the government’s programme was touted wherever aid experts gather.

“For four years in a row, a starving country is no longer a starving country,” said Pedro Sanchez, an advisor to the Malawian government who directs the Tropical Agriculture and the Rural Environment Program at Columbia University’s Earth Institute.

Calestous Juma, professor of international development at Harvard University, extravagantly praised cheap fertiliser in his book, The New Harvest. And he singled out Malawi’s miracle in a 2010 interview with New Scientist magazine.

African soils are in a poor state because of the low use of fertiliser. Bingu wa Mutharika, Malawi’s president, is showing the lead here. He is giving subsidies to farmers to buy fertiliser.

But what’s this? Malawi has now decided to give away goats and to promote alternative crops, and is passing a nutrition act that bans the sale of “non-fortified basic foodstuffs”. The country is acting as if there’s more to food security than bumper maize harvests. And they admit it!

Senior civil servants claim the moves mark a departure from farming policies that simply aimed to fill people up with staple maize in lean times. Food shortages affect 1.6 million people every year, and an estimated 47% of children have stunted growth because of undernutrition, making them more vulnerable to illness and learning difficulties.

This has to have been on the books longer than the recent grain shortages plaguing the south of Malawi, and the country’s troubles are far from over. But if the shift in direction does make the country both better nourished and less susceptible to shocks, perhaps we’ll start hearing less about simplistic solutions to wicked problems.

Precarious, moi?

In the United States, there is no general consciousness of the precarious state of global agriculture.

That’s from economist Tyler Cowen in the NY Times. One solution might be to start with the precarious state of US agriculture. David Lobell could help with that. But then, if you can increase food exports in the face of a giant drought, what does that say about the state of your agriculture? And to anyone who can synthesize all that, a big thank you.

African universities get together on agriculture

The Regional Universities Forum for Capacity Building in Agriculture (RUFORUM), a consortium of 29 universities in Eastern, Central and Southern Africa, was established in 2004. The consortium originally operated as a program of the Rockefeller Foundation from 1992. RUFORUM has a mandate to oversee graduate training and networks of specialization in the Common Market for Eastern and Southern Africa (COMESA) countries. Specifically, RUFORUM recognizes the important and largely unfulfilled role that universities play in contributing to the well-being of small-scale farmers and economic development of countries throughout the sub-Saharan Africa region. We strongly believe in Innovative and Responsive Research, High Performing Proactive Graduates, A Dynamic Platform for University Networking, Advocacy for Agricultural Higher Education and University Transformation for Relevance.

Of course, it has its full complement of social networking tools, including a blog. Searching around reveals at least one resource on agrobiodiversity. No doubt there’s more.

Brainfood: South American threat map, Bee domestication, Rice origins, Legume diversity, Lima bean domestication