MAIZE FARM IN KWIMBA DISTRICT MWANZA |
NIGERIA: Cell Phones for Farmers to Cut
Corruption, Deliver Services
Abuja — Nigeria's agriculture minister today responded to a barrage of
criticism about the planned distribution of cell phones to the country's
poorest farmers.
Opposition politicians attacked the idea, and news articles and editorials criticized
it as ill conceived. Yesterday, for example, the widely read Punch newspaper,
said farmers need fertilizer and other goods, not phones. The paper quoted a
farmers' association member saying the funds government approves for
agriculture are "hijacked" before reaching farmers.
That's precisely the point of the new initiative, say agriculture ministry
officials. The scheme replaces a government-controlled program that purchased
fertilizer and seeds with one that supplies farmers through the private sector,
using vouchers distributed via mobile phones.
At a press conference this afternoon at
State House, Agriculture Minister Akinwumi Adesina, a prominent
agricultural economist who joined the cabinet a year-and-a-half ago, said that
government procurement and distribution of fertilizer "led to massive
leakages" and had been subsidizing corruption, not farmers. "A new system
had to be found that would address the corruption by reaching legitimate
farmers directly," he said.
Part of an ambitious strategy to transform agriculture, the Growth
Enhancement Support (GES) initiative has registered 4.2 million farmers and 200
agricultural dealers, according to ministry records. The scheme uses farmers'
cell phones as electronic wallets – distributing vouchers amounting to a 50 per
cent subsidy for purchase of fertilizer.
"For the first time in Nigeria we can tell you the names, addresses
and phone numbers of each farmer who received subsidized inputs from the
government," Adesina said. "The GES scheme provides us with a fair,
equitable, accountable and transparent means of distributing farm inputs to our
rural farmers."
The minister said 1.2 million farmers received their subsidized fertilizers
and seeds through cell phone vouchers in the past year, resulting in the
addition of 8.1 million metric tons to Nigeria's domestic food supply. He
said the increased production helped to avoid a predicted food crisis when the
worst floods in 5o years, beginning in July, displaced over two million people
and took the lives of over 350, according to Nigeria's National Emergency
Management Agency.
Now the pilot programme will be extended to reach farmers who don't already
have cell phones by working out ways for them to obtain the devices.
The Sun newspaper called that plan "quite laughable", saying
"any farmer that is worth the name can afford to own one, and most likely
has one already."
Adesina today contested that widespread perception, saying government
policy must be based on evidence and well analyzed data.
"We carried out an analysis of our GES work based on a large sample of
426,000 farmers from various local government areas in 13 states," he told
State House reporters. "We found that 71% of farmers sampled did not have
cell phones. This shows that many of our farmers in rural areas are quite poor
and are excluded from the benefits of the mobile phone revolution going on in Nigeria."
Estimates by the country's bureau of statistics and the Food and
Agricultural Organization, a United Nations agency based in Rome, suggest that
the country has some 14 million farmers. The agriculture ministry hopes to
assist two million poor farmers to acquire phones this year, gradually scaling
up to a level of 10 million phones – half of which will be targeted to women.
Agriculture will partner with the Ministry of Communications Technology to
provide vouchers to subsidize the direct purchase of phones by farmers from
cell phone companies. Details are still being discussed, but farmers must be
registered on the e-wallet platform to qualify for a phone voucher.
Adesina told reporters: "Once a farmer buys a phone and a SIM card,
his new phone number will be updated on the e-wallet database and he will be
able to receive his e-wallet voucher which will entitle him to purchase
fertilizer and seeds at subsidized rates."
Ministry officials say the phones could eventually be used for multiple
purposes, from communicating weather and climate information to accessing
market data. Experiences in other African countries show such uses can deliver
higher prices to farmers who sell their excess production to earn needed
income.
Agriculture officials will work with willing cell phone companies to
implement the voucher scheme. If phone venders would agree to reduce prices for
farmers who qualify for the GES program, it could scale up more rapidly,
multiplying the number of potential customers for the companies.
Beyond its short-term goals, the ministry hopes to encourage phone
companies to expand their infrastructure to areas of the country now outside
the range of cellular networks. A growing user base could provide financial
incentives for that investment, cementing what the government hopes will be a
model for public-private partnerships to benefit Nigeria.
In a conversation last week, Adesina said that the phones-for-farmers plan,
while important, is only a small part of his ministry's drive to make Nigeria
self-sufficient in food. The country spends U.S. $11 billion annually to import
staples like wheat and rice as well as other foods – draining financial
reserves and fueling inflation.
The minister and a team of like-minded colleagues – some of whom left
well-paid positions in international capitals to join the campaign – believe
they are in a race to implement irreversible and sustainable reforms. Whatever
the results of future elections, they aim to leave a legacy of fundamental
change.
This article is the first of a series about Nigeria's efforts to reduce
poverty and hunger, fight malaria and other diseases, and improve rates of
mother and child survival. The Rockefeller Foundation provides assistance for
AllAfrica's reporting on targeted interventions to address the needs of the
poor and vulnerable and improve human well-being. AllAfrica's development
reporting is supported by a major grant from the Bill & Melinda Gates
Foundation.
By. Nagerian Newspapers.
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