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HomeGuest columnistThe Power of An End to End View of Agricultural Value Chains

The Power of An End to End View of Agricultural Value Chains

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Very few actors in African agriculture can see the entire value chain and its nodes. As a result, production activities continue to be based on guesswork. In most cases, some traders who have been in the marketing game for a long time have more knowledge about the value chain than farmers. Many traders often prefinance production and end up more informed about particular commodities. In knowledge-intensive value chains, most farmers are not keen to understand the whole value chain, preferring to have traders come and buy from the farm. While this practice has its own merits, a major shortcoming is that farmers are not able to get feedback directly from consumers.

Towards transparency in prices and volumes
In cases where traders assume the responsibility of relaying information between producers and consumers, producers may not get all the information needed for accurate decision making. That is why getting to the market and understanding the entire ecosystem is a worthwhile investment for producers.

One big benefit from ICTs is reducing information asymmetry in ways that reinforce transparency in terms of volumes of commodities flowing into the market and changes in prices.

The following analysis is an example of decision-making information that is being collected and processed by eMKambo with the aid of ICTs in Zimbabwe’s informal food markets which handle more than 70 percent of locally produced food. The analysis focuses on potato supply in Harare’s major informal markets like Mbare and Lusaka-Highfield from January to October 2017. At peak periods, Mbare market alone handles more than 400 tons of potatoes a day.

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In Zimbabwe potatoes are consumed in different ways – fried, roasted, boiled and baked. Processing companies also use potatoes to make potato crisps while most food outlets use potatoes to produce French fries. A total of 641441- 15kg pockets translating to 9621.66t were supplied to Harare markets as shown below:

Supplies usually come in three different sizes – small, medium and large. Price per pocket also differs
with the potato size, the large being the most expensive pocket. Traders in the wholesale market also sell
seed potato whose unit of measurement is usually a 5-litre tin. Chats/baby potatoes are also sold. Some
traders specialize on selling potatoes with defects that would have been damaged during harvesting.

Emirates
Production sources

Tracking sources of commodities like potatoes is one of the challenges for producers and financial institutions keen to invest in agriculture. Evidence shows a drastic increases in potato production in 2017 compared to other years. This has been due to good and prolonged rain season, among other factors. An increase in the number of production areas also demonstrate the extent to which potato production is spreading around the country. It also means production information is becoming standardized and easily available. The top 5 potato suppliers were Mazowe, Beatrice, Harare, Mhondoro and Acturus, as shown below. Harare as a produce source includes some of the per-urban farms around the outskirts of Harare.www.263chat.com

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While the average price has beeen $6 per pocket, the price ranges have been between $3 to $10 per 15kg pocket depending on quality, variety, size and source distance from the market and supply versus demand at a given period. The total estimated revenue generated by potatoes from January to October 2017 in the above mentioned markets was more than $6,584,475.69. That is not a meaningless figure. Instead of producing blindly, modern farmers should insist on getting an end to end view of the market including insights such as the collective monetary value from staples like potatoes and different commodities.

The writer Charles Dhewa can be contacted on the following details; Charles@knowledgetransafrica.com / charles@emkambo.co.zw / info@knowledgetransafrica.com Website: www.emkambo.co.zw / www.knowledgetransafrica.com, eMkambo Call Centre: 0771 859000-5/ 0716 331140-5 / 0739 866 343-6

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