RATIN

SPUR AGRIBUSINESS THROUGH SHORT-TERM CROP FARMING

Posted on May, 25, 2022 at 09:48 am


Generally speaking, short-term, or short-season, crops are those that are grown and mature, ready for harvest, within 45 to 60 days. These include beans, buckwheat, oats, yellow mustard, oilseed radish and sorghum.

But in extreme cases, crops that are grown for up to six months are also considered short-term. A few examples of these are maize, cotton, some carrots, okra, betel leaves, lemongrass, saffron and bitter gourds.

According to the Agricultural Policy Research in Africa (Apra), agribusiness is the saviour for many farmers as it is a major means of fighting poverty by most rural households.

Apra has appealed to all stakeholders in agriculture, including the government and its related institutions, to work closely together in motivating farmers, and increasing their operational capacity to produce short-term crops on a commercial basis.

Tanzania has already jumped on the agribusiness bandwagon via its Agribusiness Vision 2025. Pioneered by the Ministry of Agriculture, the Agribusiness Vision revolves around the government creating value-addition chains for raw materials and commodity outputs using primary agricultural produce as inputs.

This is in correlation with the National Development Vision 2025 which envisages a semi-industrialised economy by 2025. There should be no reason why the vision cannot be realised on the ground for a country like Tanzania, which is already richly endowed with the requisite resources, including arable land for both rain-fed and irrigation farming, as well as numerous other comparative advantages.

According to a recent report by the US-based venture capital firm Village Capital titled Mapping Agriculture Investing in Africa, Tanzania is among the top East African countries – the others being Kenya and Uganda, which receive investments in agricultural startups.

As it has been said elsewhere, nothing is impossible under the sun, but one must nonetheless strive hard, determinedly and sincerely to make it in all-inclusive sustainable socioeconomic development.

Source: The Citizen