African domestic supply booms in value chains of fruits, vegetables, and animal products fueled by spontaneous clusters of SMEs

Author:

Reardon Thomas12,Liverpool‐Tasie Lenis Saweda O.13,Belton Ben14,Dolislager Michael5,Minten Bart6,Popkin Barry7,Vos Rob8

Affiliation:

1. Department of Agricultural, Food, and Resource Economics Michigan State University (MSU) & International Food Policy Research Institute (IFPRI) East Lansing Michigan USA

2. International Food Policy Research Institute (IFPRI) Washington, D.C USA

3. International Institute of Tropical Agriculture (IITA) Ibadan Nigeria

4. IFPRI Dhaka Bangladesh

5. Messiah University Mechanicsburg Pennsylvania USA

6. IFPRI Vientiane Laos

7. Department of Nutrition University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill North Carolina USA

8. Markets Trade, and Institutions Unit, IFPRI Washington, D.C USA

Abstract

AbstractThere is an international consensus that Africans consume less fruits and vegetables (FV), and animal products (AP) than they need for adequate nutrition, and that production and supply chains of these products are constrained. Yet, in this paper, we show that despite these problems, there is a lot of dynamism in demand and supply of these nutrient‐dense products in Africa: (1) macro evidence of “domestic supply booms"—with supply growing as fast as or faster than in Asia and Latin America; (2) only 2–4% of FV, and 10% of AP consumption in Africa is imported, and only about 1–2% of the output of FV and AP is exported: the supply booms have thus been overwhelming domestically sourced, not imported; (3) micro evidence of substantial shares of consumption of FV and AP in total food consumption, similar to Asia's; (4) evidence of rapid development of spontaneous clusters of farms and off‐farm SMEs (output wholesalers, logistics, processors, and agro‐dealers supporting farmers). These clusters are important in fueling the supply booms. Illustrative cases from Ethiopia, Nigeria, Tanzania, and Zambia are presented. We recommend that African governments and international partners: (1) internalize the fact that these spontaneous clusters are forming and already fueling supply booms; (2) note that important drivers of the booms have been government investments in wholesale markets, roads, and other infrastructure like electrification, and agricultural research/extension; (3) leverage and support existing spontaneous clusters and help new ones to form by greatly increasing those three types of public investments.

Publisher

Wiley

Reference73 articles.

1. African Union.2023.The Common Africa Agro‐Parks (CAAPs) Implementation to Boost Acceleration of the AfCFTA and Promote Continental Agro‐Industrialization and IntegrationPress release February 22.https://au.int/en/pressreleases/20230222/common-africa-agro-parks-caaps-implementation-boost-acceleration-afcfta-and

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