Abstract

Agriculture in Africa is not sustainable because average yields have been stagnating for decades due to underinvestment, especially in the development of agricultural markets, crop improvement and the sustainable management of agricultural systems. Low public sector funding for agricultural research and lack of incentives for the private sector to operate in areas where there is no market largely explain the yield gap in many food-importing developing countries. Yet, there are effective ways in which the public and the private sector could work together and jointly improve agricultural sustainability in poor countries. The public sector provides a favorable institutional environment for the development of agricultural markets and investment in rural infrastructure, facilitates local business development and funds research with local relevance. The private sector, in return, brings its considerable expertise in product development and deployment. This article illustrates how new forms of public-private partnerships (PPPs) for agricultural development can work in challenging environments. It discusses three promising examples of PPPs in which the Syngenta Foundation for Sustainable Agriculture (SFSA) is actively involved, and shows that an experimental approach can sometimes be more effective than social planning in efforts to achieve sustainable agriculture.

Highlights

  • Agriculture made great progress during the “Green Revolution” of the 1960s and 1970s

  • It is worth recalling a number of points about private partnerships (PPPs)

  • Their usefulness is by no means limited to agricultural development, but they can make a major contribution in this area

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Summary

Introduction

Agriculture made great progress during the “Green Revolution” of the 1960s and 1970s. The public and private sector have attempted to provide solutions independently from each other, with the exception of certain sections in the long path from basic research to widespread commercial deployment where collaboration was unavoidable. PPP for sustainable agricultural development can include, for example, multi-partner structures that bring together private companies with entities such as non-governmental organizations (NGO), university research institutes and foundations. These structures have sometimes been termed “Hybrid Value Chains” that create shared value [4]. Contracts, planning, inter-partner relationships and the distribution of tasks within the PPP should all contribute to maximizing synergies between the parties involved

Agricultural Public-Private Partnerships in Current Practice
Non-Profit Partnership
Multi-Partner Collaborations
Advice to Organizations Planning a PPP for the First Time
Findings
Conclusions
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