FRANKFURT SCHOOL

BLOG

Financial institutions' role in aiding smallholder farmers' resilience
Weiterbildung / 27. April 2023
  • Teilen

  • 2460

  • 0

  • Drucken
Lead Expert and Senior Trainer for Certified Expert in Microfinance
Helmut Grossmann has been working as a Microfinance Specialist for Frankfurt School of Finance & Management for over 10 years in more than 20 countries. Within his assignments he has been actively involved in giving trainings on the job as well as in classroom. From 2004 until 2013 he has been a lead trainer at one of Frankfurt School’s flagship training programmes for executives, the Summer Academies and also he designed the e-learning course – Certified Expert in Microfinance. He serves as senior consultant and trainer for various Competence Centres of Frankfurt School focusing on financial system development in microfinance as well as in rural finance and agriculture finance.

Autorenprofil

Mehr Blog Posts
Erforschung der Auswirkungen von KI auf die Zukunft der Arbeit
Schlüsselstrategien für Business Development in der dynamischen Geschäftswelt
Integrationsprozesse meistern, Fusionsziele erreichen!

When German-born British economist E. F. Schumacher published his book „Small Is Beautiful“ in 1973, he proposed an alternative to the mainstream economic principle of „bigger is better“. Schumacher was an early proponent of sustainable development, demanding that people and the planet should matter more than mere profits.

Big in numbers, small in size

Agriculture plays a key role in global and local sustainable development. It is not an exaggeration to say: Farming is everyone’s business! Just think about the following mind-blowing facts:

  • The world population will reach 10 billion by the year 2050, and global food demand will increase by some 50% until then.
  • 30% of global food production is lost and wasted after harvesting.
  • Every year, we lose almost 1% of global farmland due to environmental degradation.
  • 26% of global greenhouse gas emissions, which cause climate change, come from the food sector.
  • Up to 2,000 species of wild animals and plants are estimated to become extinct each year; agriculture is a main driver of biodiversity losses.
  • There are an estimated 570 million farms worldwide; 84% of them are smallholdings with less than 2 hectares of land (that is, a plot of 200 meters by 100 meters).
  • These farms operate only 12% of all agricultural land on our planet but still produce roughly one-third of the world’s food.

Distribution-of-worlds-farms-and-farmland-area

Figure 1: Distribution of the world’s farms and farmland area by land size class.
Source: CGAP (https://www.cgap.org/blog/global-distribution-of-smallholder-and-family-farms).

Why do smallholder farmers matter?

If we consider sustainability in all its dimensions – social, economic and environmental – we need to focus on the world’s half-billion smallholder farms.

About two-thirds of the world’s poor are farmers. The good news first: growth in the agricultural sector is two to four times more effective in raising incomes among the poorest compared to other sectors. The bad news: only a quarter of the estimated USD 200 billion financing needs of farmers are currently being met by the financial sector. Put more positively: providing finance to smallholders is the biggest opportunity for scale and impact in financial inclusion today.[1]

Most smallholder farmers are poor and suffer seasonal food shortages. Yet, their livelihoods are increasingly being threatened by the effects of climate change, degraded ecosystems, pollution and natural resource depletion. Think of droughts, floods, storms, farmland turning into deserts and water polluted by agrochemicals; on top of that, armed conflicts, land grabbing and forced displacements of farmers that have no official land ownership titles. There are countless threats to smallholder farmers’ livelihoods, which can be tackled by shifting to sustainable farming methods.

The typical smallholder farm is managed in a traditional way, that is, mixed farming, to produce food for the family and sell any surplus on the local market. Even when smallholder farmers cultivate cash crops, like coffee or cotton, they use less agrochemicals than larger farms. With the help of simple investments, these small farms can be made more productive and, at the same time, more environmentally sustainable.

For example, trees planted on farms as part of an agroforestry system generate additional income for the farmer while making the farm more climate-resilient (protection from heat and storms), capturing carbon (in the timber and soil) and fostering biodiversity by creating habitats for insects and birds. In fact, there are many such simple, sustainable farming methods that can have positive social, economic and environmental impacts at the same time.

Financial institutions can make a difference

So, why are small farmers not putting all these great ideas into practice? Simple answer: they lack the funds. This is where financial institutions come into play.

The main reasons why most banks and insurers shy away from serving smallholder farmers are the perceived risks of agriculture and the relatively high transaction costs of serving farmers in remote areas. Fortunately, there are answers to these problems.

Successful providers of smallholder finance, such as rural microfinance institutions and agricultural development banks, have found ways to tackle the risk and cost challenges. For example, they cooperate with farmer groups, cooperatives, exporters or food processors to channel loans and repayments through their books. Funds are invested in sustainable farming practices, including agroforestry, certified organic farming, the production of biofuels, rainwater harvesting and drip irrigation, to name just a few examples.

Insurance companies have successfully experimented with index insurance, for instance, to cover farmers against droughts. And there are many innovations in the field of digital finance, such as the use of mobile phones to transfer payments from buyers to farmers, linked to technical farm advice via text messages.

Frankfurt School Summer Academy

Employees of financial institutions require new technical and managerial skills to tackle the various challenges related to the transformation of agriculture. This is one of the focal areas of the  Summer Academy 2023 offered by Frankfurt School from 3 to 7 July in Frankfurt am Main, Germany. Other themes of this year’s Summer Academy are Risk Management, Digital and Inclusive Finance, Sustainable Finance and Housing Finance.

Take a look at the Summer Academy website to find out more.

[1] cf.  https://www.cgap.org/blog/global-distribution-of-smallholder-and-family-farms

0 Kommentare

Senden