Input Markets
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Changes to Malawi Fertilizer Subsidy Program Mean Higher Cost for Farmers
Earlier this month, Malawi’s government announced a major change to the country’s Farm Input Subsidy Programme (FISP), an 11-year-old program designed to achieve food self-sufficiency and increased incomes for Malawi’s resource-poor farmers. For the 2015-2016 season, a 50kg bag of fertilizer will cost farmers K3500 (approximately USD 6.31), a 600 percent increase from last year’s cost of K500 (USD 0.90).
The Challenge of Increasing Agricultural Productivity in Africa South of the Sahara
The following post by IFPRI senior researcher Alejandro Nin Pratt was originally published on ASTI News and Notes .
What Part Do Women Play in Agricultural Labor?
Since it was first cited in a 1972 paper by the United Nations Economic Commission for Africa, the idea that women perform 60-80 percent of agricultural labor in Africa has been a central theme in the broader debate about gender and development. A new study released by the World Bank’s Living Standards Measurement Study – Integrated Surveys on Agriculture (LSMSISA) initiative is now calling this commonly accepted wisdom into question, however.
Gender, Assets, and Agricultural Development
Studies have shown that when women own or control household assets, they can improve the well-being of both themselves and their families. But in many developing countries, men own and control the majority of assets. Without a fair share of ownership, women have little or no control over such decisions as what crops to plant or how and when to sell produce of livestock. Ownership and control of assets can also impact who is eligible to participate in and benefit from development programs.
Web Tool Tracks Agricultural Investments in Africa
The article is originally published on African Farming .
The Regional Strategic Analysis and Knowledge Support System - Eastern and Central Africa (ReSAKSS-ECA) has launched a new web tool to track investments made for African agriculture.
The new web tool, AgInvest Africa, was developed by ReSAKSS-ECA and funded by the United States Agency for International Development (USAID).