
Subscribe & Follow
Jobs
- Receptionist Blackheath
- Wine Tourism Marketing Coordinator Paarl
- Senior Bookkeeper Somerset West
SADC subsidies fail to ease rural poverty and soil deterioration, study finds

The African Centre for Biodiversity said a new research report on Farm Input Subsidy Programmes (Fisps) found that 10 African governments have spent close on 30% of their agricultural budgets on large-scale Fisps since 2000.
The programmes, which provide 30%–100% subsidies on the price of fertiliser and seed (normally hybrid maize), aim to reduce food insecurity and reduce rural poverty.
"Of the 15 countries that comprise SADC, Botswana and Lesotho offer universal input subsidy schemes, and Malawi, Mauritius, Mozambique, Namibia, Swaziland, Tanzania, Zambia and Zimbabwe provide targeted, large-scale programmes. The remaining countries, including SA, practice ad hoc subsidisation," the report said.
Read the full article on Agri Africa.
Related
Pick n Pay's fight against hunger in South Africa 15 Oct 2024 Technology and sustainable farming can contain the cost-price squeeze 9 Oct 2024 Mandela Rhodes Foundation 2024 Äänit Prize winners announced 18 Sep 2024 Mass potato donation provides staple for over 5 million meals countrywide 21 Jun 2024 Almost 50% of adult South Africans are overweight or obese. Poverty and poor nutrition are largely to blame 14 Jun 2024 SA Harvest receives R1m from H&M for fight against hunger 17 May 2024
