LONDON. — With agriculture making up approximately 65 percent of Africa’s labour force and 35 percent of the continent’s GDP, the sector’s capacity to help realise major continental development priorities is beyond doubt. Yet, as the IIED argues, the agricultural industry in many African countries has been unable to “meet its full potential as an employer, fair distributor of income, and national revenue earner”.

There are a host of factors contributing to current challenges and, as Dr Agnes Kalibata, President of AGRA and former Rwandan Minister for Agriculture, correctly stated in a recent interview, “we need to find financial tools that help us all step up the game . . . prioritising agriculture is not just the moral thing to do. It’s an economic imperative”.

Commodities exchanges offer significant price-risk management solutions for both buyers and sellers. Structured commodities exchanges represent one such financial tool and provide a compelling approach to tackling some of the challenges inherent in agriculture across the continent.

Defined as “an organised marketplace where buyers and sellers come together to trade commodity-related contracts following rules set by the exchange”, commodities exchanges should be seen as key drivers of development – they can make economies more inclusive, and forge stronger links between agriculture and finance.

As such, they deserve further exploration in our quest to ensure food security in Africa. Crucially, commodities exchanges offer significant price-risk management solutions for both buyers and sellers. Many require farmers to store commodities in certified warehouses, ensuring the security and quality of crops.

This feature presents fewer risks to financiers who can use warehouse receipts as collateral, thus facilitating increased bank lending for farmers. At the same time, structured markets also offer the opportunity to “hedge” against volatile prices, meaning farmers can “lock in” their sales price at the time of planting various crops. This feature is especially valuable to smallholder farmers, who represent approximately 80 percent of the continent’s producers, yet are particularly vulnerable to economic shocks. Smallholder farmers that want to participate in markets generally face the highest transaction costs.

These are driven up by factors including poor transportation, and a lack of access to information and expertise — primary reasons why so many struggle to escape from subsistence farming. While the application of emerging ICT helps commodity exchanges integrate smallholder farmers into supply chains, exchanges also reduce transaction costs, as it’s easier to find buyers and sellers through a centralised marketplace.

As a result, commodity exchanges can facilitate trade, and stimulate economic growth in developing countries, potentially boosting foreign direct investment. The much-acclaimed Ethiopian Commodities Exchange (ECX), established in 2007, offers a tantalising vision of what can be achieved across Africa. The ECX has provided farmers with access to real-time pricing information, improved profits and productivity, reduced market segmentation and boosted export quality.

Regarding this latter point, Addis Ababa continues to innovate with the recent launch of a national traceability system — via new electronic tagging technology, international buyers are able to track the entire footprint of Ethiopian coffee.

However, despite some notable successes, it’s important to recognise that exchanges are not a straightforward panacea. Their successful implementation requires an appropriate enabling framework, effective regulatory supervision, and governments’ commitment to respect market-pricing mechanisms.

The difficulties experienced in Zambia, Zimbabwe, Nigeria, and Uganda illustrates the importance of investing in the required infrastructure. Even in Ethiopia, Eleni Gabre-Madhin, founder of the ECX, acknowledges that the state did not build sufficient warehouses.

To amend shortcomings such as this in the government next five-year growth plan, current ECX Chief Executive, Ermias Eshetu, stated that they will “re-strategise from the bottom-up”.

To ensure benefits arising from exchange activities are equitable and inclusive, education — a particular focus of the Planet Earth Institute (PEI), an international charity dedicated to scientific development in Africa of which I am a trustee — will also be key.

To that end, on November 23, the PEI will host a fascinating meeting in partnership with INTL FCStone, a Fortune 500 financial services firm that is currently driving important capacity building initiatives across the continent, with commodity trading and risk management seminars scheduled in several African cities in 2016.

As highlighted in a recent WEF report, achieving food security and establishing Africa as a prosperous continent will mean addressing two fundamental challenges: how to facilitate smallholders transition to commercial production; and how to generate much needed private investment to help transform the agricultural value chain.

While we must be sensitive to the individual needs of different African nations, the development of structured exchanges — integrated within a holistic commodity strategy that improves the production capacity of farmers and encourage infrastructure upgrades — has the potential to significantly contribute to addressing both of these challenges. — Quartz.

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