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Maize Marketing |
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Maize Marketing
and Trade Policies
to Promote Household Food Security in Southern Africa
A
Research and Outreach Project Involving:
The Food, Agriculture and Natural Resources Policy Analysis
Network (FANRPAN)
Michigan State University, Department of Agricultural Economics (MSU)
The Rockefeller Foundation
Marketing
and processing costs account for 50 to 70 percent of the total cost paid by
consumers in Southern Africa for staple maize meal. Strategies that can successfully
drive down costs within the marketing system can simultaneously raise the incomes
of farmers and improve poor peoples’ access to food.
This website provides research
material and outreach information generated by FANRPAN, MSU, and collaborators
under the Maize Marketing and Trade Project. The project was initiated in January
2004 to support FANRPAN’s dissemination of high-quality analysis and outreach
information to Ministries of Agriculture and other stakeholders in the agricultural
sector in the SADC region. The pilot countries involved in the project are currently
Malawi, Mozambique, South Africa, and Zambia. Financial support from the Rockefeller
Foundation covers the period January 2004 to December 2005.
For a summary of Project
objectives and activities, click here.
For the end-of-Year One Progress Report, click here.
Research Reports
and Working Papers:
- Jayne, T.S., B. Zulu,
D. Mather, E. Mghenyi, E. Chirwa, and D. Tschirley. 2005. Maize Marketing and Trade Policy
in a Pro-Poor Agricultural Growth Strategy: Insights from Household Surveys
in
Eastern and Southern Africa. Paper prepared for the
Conference on “Toward Improved Maize Marketing and Trade Policies
in the Southern Africa Region,” Sponsored by the Food, Agriculture,
and Natural Resources. Policy Analysis Network (FANRPAN).
June 21-22, 2005,
Centurion Park Hotel, Centurion, South Africa. Draft.
- Tschirley, D., D. Abdula,
and M. T. Weber,
2005. Toward
Improved Marketing and Trade Policies To Promote Household Food Security
in Central and Southern Mozambique. Paper prepared for the Conference
on “Toward Improved Maize Marketing and Trade Policies in the Southern
Africa Region,” Sponsored by the Food, Agriculture, and Natural Resources
Policy Analysis Network (FANRPAN). June 21-22, 2005. Centurion Park Hotel,
Centurion, South Africa.
- Tschirley, D., J. Nijhoff,
P. Arlindo, B. Mwinga, M. Weber, and T. Jayne, 2004. Anticipating
and Responding to Drought Emergencies in Southern Africa: Lessons from the
2002-2003 Experience. Prepared for the NEPAD Regional Conference on Successes
in African Agriculture, 22-25 November 2004, Nairobi, Kenya.
Policy Briefs:
- Mwanaumo, Anthony, Hyde
Haantuba, Pedro Arlindo, Danilo Abdula, T.S. Jayne, David Tschirley, Jan
Nijhoff, Michael Weber, Cynthia Donovan, and John Staatz. Toward
a Regional Framework for Effective Policy Responses to the Emerging Food
Crisis in Southern Africa. Draft FANRPAN Policy Brief, 2005.
Policy Presentations:
- The
Effects of Market Reform on Maize Marketing Margins in South Africa:
An Empirical Study. Lulama Traub and T.S. Jayne. Contributed paper, International
Association of Agricultural Economics Tri-Annual Meetings, Gold Coast, Australia,
August 12-18, 2006.
- Where
Should Public and Donor Investments be Targeted? T.S. Jayne, A. Mwanaumo,
J. Govereh, B. Zulu, and J. K. Nyoro. Presentation at 1st Regional Grain
Trade Summit. October 12-13, Nairobi, Kenya.
- Pretoria
Workshop Agenda (June 21/22, 2005).
Maize Marketing and Trade Policies in Southern Africa: Toward Defining
Appropriate and Mutually Supportive Roles for the Public and Private Sectors.
Examples of Outreach
and Impact:
- Materials
prepared for the FANRPAN
2005 Regional Multi-Stakeholder Public Policy Dialogue. Theme: Creating
A Conducive Policy Environment For A Food Secure SADC. 4-7 October
2005 .
- SADC
Recovery, Food Security And Trade Policies: Making Markets Work For
Smallholders Farmers In SADC by Chairperson: Mr. S. Pazvakavambwa,
Secretary for Agriculture- Zimbabwe. (ppt)
(paper forthcoming)
- Improving
Maize Marketing and Trade Policies To Promote Household Food Security
in Central and Southern Mozambique By Danilo Abdula, David
Tschirley, and Michael Weber. (ppt)
- Learning
from the 2002/03 Food Crisis in Southern Africa: Lessons for the
Current Year by Pedro Arlindo, David Tschirley, Jan Nijhoff,
Billy Mwiinga, Michael T. Weber, and T.S. Jayne. (ppt)
- Toward
a Regional Framework for Effective Policy Responses to the Emerging
Food Crisis in Southern Africa by Anthony Mwanaumo, Hyde Haantuba,
Pedro Arlindo, Danilo Abdula, T.S. Jayne, David Tschirley, Jan
Nijhoff, Michael Weber, Cynthia Donovan, and John Staatz. (ppt)
- Opportunities
to Improve Household Food Security Through Promoting Informal Maize
Marketing Agents: Experience From Eastern Cape Province, South Africa
by L. Ndibongo-Traub and T.S. Jayne. (ppt)
(paper forthcoming)
- Full page article appearing
in the daily Maputo newspaper "Noticias",
August 6, 2004, highlighting research findings on marketing strategies
to reduce the price of staple maize for low-income consumers in the region
(in Portugese, English translation will be posted soon)
For related information,
please also see the FANRPAN web site at: http://www.fanrpan.org/welcome.htm
| For
more information, contact: |
Lindiwe
Sibanda
Chief Executive Officer, FANRPAN
141
Cresswell Street, Silverton
Pretoria
0127, South Africa
Tel: +27-12-845 9100
Fax: +27-12-845 9110
Mobile: +27-72-441 8110
Lindiwe
Sibanda
http://www.fanrpan.org/welcome.htm |
T.S.
Jayne
Professor, International Development
Michigan State University
Department of Agricultural Economics
216a Agriculture Hall
Tel: 1-517-355-0131
Fax: 1-775-415-8964
jayne@msu.edu
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