Organisers:
International Development Economics Associates (IDEAs)
The Ethiopian Economic Association (EEA),
Addis Ababa
CODESRIA,
Dakar, Senegal.
Supported by:
UNDP, New York.
IDEAs'
first conference, along with the workshop which immediately
preceded, held in Africa and meant exclusively for
African economists and policymakers took place in
Addis Ababa, Ethiopia during 17-19 December 2004.
The event, along with the workshop were organized
in association with the Ethiopian Economic Association
(EEA) and the Council for the Development of Social
Science Research in Africa (CODESRIA), with support
from the UNDP. With a special focus on the agricultural
sector, the agenda centred on understanding the linkages
between the ongoing processes of agrarian transformation,
the increase in poverty and the underlying macroeconomic
processes, with particular reference to Africa. The
fundamental logic that drove the agenda was the belief
that agrarian development cannot be looked at independently
of the macroeconomic context, both at the national
and international levels, and therefore, that the
widening and deepening crises of livelihood and food
security occurring in several parts of the less developed
world have to be examined as such. Exploring the linkages
between the macroeconomic processes and specific changes
observed in the agrarian sector, and their implications
for poverty reduction were thus the major areas of
discussion. The nature of the role of state in addressing
the various constraints to agrarian transformation
and in adopting progressive development alternatives
also featured prominently during the two days of deliberations.
The
objective of the international conference on 'The
Agrarian Constraint and Poverty Reduction: Macroeconomic
Lessons for Africa' which was held subsequently
was to focus on issues of current concern facing the
agrarian sectors of Third World economies with particular
reference to Africa. The majority of the conference
participants were from within Africa, and most of
the papers and discussions focused on African countries’
experiences in dealing with agrarian transformation
in the current international conjuncture.
The
conference speakers included late Prof. Guy Mhone
of the University of Witwatersrand, South Africa,
Dr. Berhanu Nega of the Addis Ababa University, Prof.
Sam Moyo, Prof. Ben Turok of the African National
Congress, South Africa, Zenebewerke Tadesse (formerly
of CODESRIA), Carlos Oya of the School of Oriental
and African Studies, Prof. Francis Wilson of the University
of Cape Town, Dr. Mamadou Dansokho of Dakar, Senegal,
Prof. Utsa Patnaik, Prof. Germina Ssemogerere, Makerere
University, Uganda, Patrick Bond, Director of Centre
for Civil Society, University of Kwazulu-Natal, Jomo
K.S. (former Chair of IDEAs and currently at UN’s
Department of Economic and Social Affairs), Jayati
Ghosh, Prof. Assefa Ademassie, Director, EEA, Prof.
Terry McKinley, UNDP, Prof. Juan Carlos Moreno, CEPAL,
etc.
The
first day of the conference had sessions centred on
the global context of the current agrarian transition,
and the underdevelopment and poverty linkages of the
agrarian question. Specific issues of trade in agriculture,
and the implications of financial liberalisation for
agriculture were the focus during the second day of
the conference. The following papers were presented:
- How
Viable is an Agriculture-centered Development Strategy
in Africa? Lessons from Ethiopia by Berhanu Nega
- The
Land and Agrarian Question in Zimbabwe by Sam Moyo
- Agricultural
Growth in South Africa and Tanzania: The Solution
to the Challenge of Unemployment and Poverty in
Africa by Francis Wilson
- Alternative
Ways of Estimating Poverty and Implications
for Policy: A Critical Appraisal from the Indian
Experience by Utsa Patnaik
- The
Structure of the Ethiopian Economy: A SAM-based
Characterization and Analysis by Alemayehu Seyoum
Tafesse
- Stocktaking
Empirical Findings on Sub-Saharan Africa’s Agricultural
Liberalisation (Focus on Mozambique, Senegal and
Zambia) by Carlos Oya
- African
Development /Governance, South African Sub-imperialism
and NEPAD by Patrick Bond
- Financial
Liberalisation and Credit: A Case Study of Uganda
by Germina Ssemogerere
- Agricultural
Credit in Ethiopia after Financial Liberalization
by Assefa Ademassie
- Liberalisation
and the Rural Banking Policy: An Indian Case Study
by V K Ramachandran
- Panel
discussion on: '‘Macroeconomic Policies, Agriculture
and Poverty' chaired by Zenebewerke Tadesse
Coming
to macroeconomic lessons in solving the agrarian constraint,
the conference concluded that for economies for which
the agriculture sector or the rural population is
important, the constraints which seem to be radically
more crucial than the so-called agrarian constraint
under the present conjuncture are the financial constraints,
the fiscal constraints and the external constraint.
But the most binding constraints were acknowledged
as the ideological and political constraints. It was
widely agreed that part of the solution in opposing
the hegemony of Washington Consensus is about sharing
and expanding a common understanding of the problem
and mobilising people. And in this context, it was
agreed that conferences of this nature are extremely
important to ensure that the hegemony of ideas of
progressive development are re-established.
It
was also suggested by the eminent African development
economist late Prof. Guy Mhone that Africa is still
lagging far behind in clarifying its developmental
problem when compared to countries in Latin America
and Asia. He envisioned that there is a need to extend
a developmental paradigm or developmental stance for
Africa, within which the discourses of rural economy,
agriculture, industrialization, credit, unemployment,
poverty, etc., all need to be located and analysed.
While the conference
successfully wove together the macroeconomic fabric
driving the agrarian transition in Africa and there
was agreement on the fact that the neoliberal macroeconomic
policy package is undermining developing country agriculture
across the continent, it was acknowledged that it
is also imperative to understand the nature of this
transformation at the micro level. Thus, changes in
production relations in agriculture and allied sectors
in different regions, the nature of involvement of
agri enterprises, both domestic and foreign, the macroeconomic
factors of fiscal, financial and trade policies underpinning
the dynamics of agribusiness operations and their
linkages with farmers, the implications of these both
for livelihood patterns in the rural areas at different
levels and for food security overall, the sustainability
of corporate-driven agricultural models, etc. emerged
as important issues for further in-depth analysis
and research. When IDEAs’ first event in Africa became
a remarkable intellectual experience for the over
seventy academics and young policymakers who came
together at the workshop and conference from across
the continents, it was a moment of pride and fulfilment
for IDEAs.
For the Conference Report and
Papers, Click
HERE
February 10, 2005.
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