Difference between revisions of "The changing nature of farm financialization - Safaa"

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(Created page with " ==Description/The changing nature of farm financialization== Agriculture finance empowers poor farmers to increase their wealth and food production to be able to feed 9 billion people by 2050. The work in agriculture finance helps clients provide market-based safety nets, and fund long-term investments to support sustainable economic growth. Demand for food will increase by 70% by 2050; at least $80 billion annual investments will be needed to meet this demand. There is...")
 
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==Description/The changing nature of farm financialization==
==Description==
Agriculture finance empowers poor farmers to increase their wealth and food production to be able to feed 9 billion people by 2050. The work in agriculture finance helps clients provide market-based safety nets, and fund long-term investments to support sustainable economic growth. Demand for food will increase by 70% by 2050; at least $80 billion annual investments will be needed to meet this demand.
Agricultural Finance – Financing of agriculture-related activities, from production to market. ... Contract Farming – An agreement between farmers and processing and/or marketing firms for the production and supply of agricultural products at a specified time in the future, frequently at predetermined prices. Agriculture finance empowers poor farmers to increase their wealth and food production to be able to feed 9 billion people by 2050. The work in agriculture finance helps clients provide market-based safety nets, and fund long-term investments to support sustainable economic growth. Demand for food will increase by 70% by 2050; at least $80 billion annual investments will be needed to meet this demand.
There is an ever increasing need to invest in agriculture due to a drastic rise in global population and changing dietary preferences of the growing middle class in emerging markets towards higher value agricultural products. In addition, climate risks increase the need for investments to make agriculture more resilient to such risks. Estimates suggest that demand for food will increase by 70% by 2050 and at least $80 billion annual investments will be needed to meet this demand, most of which needs to come from the private sector. Financial sector institutions in developing countries lend a disproportionately lower share of their loan portfolios to agriculture compared to the agriculture sector’s share of GDP.  
There is an ever increasing need to invest in agriculture due to a drastic rise in global population and changing dietary preferences of the growing middle class in emerging markets towards higher value agricultural products. In addition, climate risks increase the need for investments to make agriculture more resilient to such risks. Financial sector institutions in developing countries lend a disproportionately lower share of their loan portfolios to agriculture compared to the agriculture sector’s share of GDP.  
To scale all of the financialization up, we have three components we need to focus on:  
To scale all of the financialization up, we have three components in financialization of agriculture:  
- Farming of subsidies:Payments by the federal government to producers of agricultural products for the purpose of stabilising food prices, ensuring plentiful food production, guaranteeing farmers' basic incomes, and generally strengthening the agricultural segment of the national economy.
- Farming of subsidies:Payments by the federal government to producers of agricultural products for the purpose of stabilising food prices, ensuring plentiful food production, guaranteeing farmers' basic incomes, and generally strengthening the agricultural segment of the national economy.
- Direct to consumer sales:Refers to selling products directly to customers, bypassing any third-party retailers, wholesalers, ...
- Direct to consumer sales:Refers to selling products directly to customers, bypassing any third-party retailers, wholesalers, ...
- Growth of carbon accounting:processes used to measure how much carbon dioxide equivalents an organization emits. It is used by states, corporations, and individuals to create the carbon credit commodity traded on carbon markets (or to establish the demand for carbon credits). Examples of products based on forms of carbon accounting may be found in national inventories, corporate environmental reports, and carbon footprint calculators.
- Growth of carbon accounting:processes used to measure how much carbon dioxide equivalents an organization emits. It is used by states, corporations, and individuals to create the carbon credit commodity traded on carbon markets (or to establish the demand for carbon credits). Examples of products based on forms of carbon accounting may be found in national inventories, corporate environmental reports, and carbon footprint calculators.


==Enablers/The changing nature of farm financialization==
==Enablers==
There is an ever increasing need to invest in agriculture due to a drastic rise in global population and changing dietary preferences of the growing middle class in emerging markets towards higher value agricultural products. In addition, climate risks increase the need for investments to make agriculture more resilient to such risks. Estimates suggest that demand for food will increase by 70% by 2050 and at least $80 billion annual investments will be needed to meet this demand, most of which needs to come from the private sector. Financial sector institutions in developing countries lend a disproportionately lower share of their loan portfolios to agriculture compared to the agriculture sector’s share of GDP.
Financing models that promote agricultural transformation centred around the development of human capacity. The investment in human capital, particularly in rural areas is important for knowledge dissemination to other community members, which ultimately improves the general standard of living overtime so all of this can considered to be enhancing the strength factor of the nature of farm financialization:
1. Increase productivity is a priority if global’s agricultural sector needs to be transformed from mere production for local consumption to mass production for both consumption and export [3]. This can only be possible if the requisite authorities adopt policies that encourage agro-industrial farming and the growth of agribusiness nationally.
2. An increase in agricultural production is relevant for the globe if food security needs to be guaranteed by 2030. There is a need for the government to speed up investment into activities to add and fully realize production value. The government also needs to create and support market mechanisms to facilitate overall value chain control.
3. Increasing the accessibility of finance for investment into hard infrastructure that encourages the probability and cost competitiveness of scaling agricultural production and agribusiness.
4. Develop organised finance amenities which increase the flow of private capital into the agribusiness sector so as to provide adequate financial resources to measure agribusiness


==Enablers/The changing nature of farm financialization==
==Inhibitors==
On the other side, the growth and deepening of agriculture finance markets is constrained by a variety of factors which include:  
On the other side, the growth and deepening of agriculture finance markets is constrained by a variety of factors which include:  
1. inadequate or ineffective policies
1. inadequate or ineffective policies
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5. low levels of demand due to fragmentation and incipient development of value chains
5. low levels of demand due to fragmentation and incipient development of value chains
6. lack of expertise of financial institutions in managing agricultural loan portfolios
6. lack of expertise of financial institutions in managing agricultural loan portfolios
The development and commercialisation of agriculture requires financial services that can support: larger agriculture investments and agriculture-related infrastructure that require long-term funding (given that currently transportation and logistics costs are too high, especially for landlocked countries), a greater inclusion of youth and women in the sector, and advancements in technology (both in terms of mechanising the agricultural processes and leveraging mobile phones and electronic payment platforms to enhance access and reduce transaction costs). An important challenge is to address systemic risks through insurance and other risk management mechanisms and lower operating costs in dealing with smallholder farmers.


==Inhibitors/The changing nature of farm financialization==
==Paradigms==
Agriculture is the mainstay of the economy: 70 percent of the active population is engaged in the sector that generates nearly one-third of the national gross domestic product (GDP). The GoN has prioritised agriculture in its periodic plans and annual development programmes, but these remain to be strengthened in terms of implementation. The majority of farmers, who are increasingly likely to be women as males have been migrating in search of more remunerative work, are poor and climate-vulnerable. The women workers’ share in agriculture has remained significant and dropped only marginally as compared to male workers.Agriculture has already been adversely impacted
- Climate-Change Financing: The Local Context.by climate change across all regions, ethnic.  income groups, and women and the poor are worst affected.
- Discrepancies between Budget Allocation and Expenditure.
- Budgetary gap at the district level.
- Climate-Change Investment and Its Socioeconomic Impacts
- Socioeconomic Impacts
- Systematising Vulnerability Assessments
 
==Paradigms/The changing nature of farm financialization==
- It creates a lack of transparency of land ownership and production units.
- It creates a lack of transparency of land ownership and production units.
- It makes it possible to circumvent existing regulations.
- It makes it possible to circumvent existing regulations.
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- It fosters the development of farm corporations operating solely on the basis of salaried work
- It fosters the development of farm corporations operating solely on the basis of salaried work


==Experts/The changing nature of farm financialization==
==Experts==
- Bruno Larue: Agricultural economics, agricultural policies: bruno.larue@eac.ulaval.ca
- Bruno Larue: Agricultural economics, agricultural policies: bruno.larue@eac.ulaval.ca
- John Reilly: Agriculture economics. Air pollution and emissions Biofuels Climate change policy
- John Reilly: Agriculture economics. Air pollution and emissions Biofuels Climate change policy


==Timing/The changing nature of farm financialization==
==Timing==
- 1800-1870: Level of carbon dioxide gas (CO2) in the atmosphere, as later measured in ancient ice, is about 290 ppm (parts per million).
- 1800-1870: Level of carbon dioxide gas (CO2) in the atmosphere, as later measured in ancient ice, is about 290 ppm (parts per million).
- 1960: Mitchell reports downturn of global temperatures since the early 1940s.=>Modern temp's
- 1960: Mitchell reports downturn of global temperatures since the early 1940s.=>Modern temp's
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- 2019: Increasing disasters (tropical cyclones, wildfires, etc.) join scientists' warnings to spur public demonstrations and civil disobedience  
- 2019: Increasing disasters (tropical cyclones, wildfires, etc.) join scientists' warnings to spur public demonstrations and civil disobedience  


==Web Resources/The changing nature of farm financialization==
==Web Resources==
- https://www.worldbank.org/en/topic/financialsector/brief/agriculture-finance
- https://www.worldbank.org/en/topic/financialsector/brief/agriculture-finance
- https://legal-dictionary.thefreedictionary.com/Agriculture+Subsidies   
- https://legal-dictionary.thefreedictionary.com/Agriculture+Subsidies   

Revision as of 01:08, 9 December 2021

Description

Agricultural Finance – Financing of agriculture-related activities, from production to market. ... Contract Farming – An agreement between farmers and processing and/or marketing firms for the production and supply of agricultural products at a specified time in the future, frequently at predetermined prices. Agriculture finance empowers poor farmers to increase their wealth and food production to be able to feed 9 billion people by 2050. The work in agriculture finance helps clients provide market-based safety nets, and fund long-term investments to support sustainable economic growth. Demand for food will increase by 70% by 2050; at least $80 billion annual investments will be needed to meet this demand. There is an ever increasing need to invest in agriculture due to a drastic rise in global population and changing dietary preferences of the growing middle class in emerging markets towards higher value agricultural products. In addition, climate risks increase the need for investments to make agriculture more resilient to such risks. Financial sector institutions in developing countries lend a disproportionately lower share of their loan portfolios to agriculture compared to the agriculture sector’s share of GDP. To scale all of the financialization up, we have three components in financialization of agriculture: - Farming of subsidies:Payments by the federal government to producers of agricultural products for the purpose of stabilising food prices, ensuring plentiful food production, guaranteeing farmers' basic incomes, and generally strengthening the agricultural segment of the national economy. - Direct to consumer sales:Refers to selling products directly to customers, bypassing any third-party retailers, wholesalers, ... - Growth of carbon accounting:processes used to measure how much carbon dioxide equivalents an organization emits. It is used by states, corporations, and individuals to create the carbon credit commodity traded on carbon markets (or to establish the demand for carbon credits). Examples of products based on forms of carbon accounting may be found in national inventories, corporate environmental reports, and carbon footprint calculators.

Enablers

Financing models that promote agricultural transformation centred around the development of human capacity. The investment in human capital, particularly in rural areas is important for knowledge dissemination to other community members, which ultimately improves the general standard of living overtime so all of this can considered to be enhancing the strength factor of the nature of farm financialization: 1. Increase productivity is a priority if global’s agricultural sector needs to be transformed from mere production for local consumption to mass production for both consumption and export [3]. This can only be possible if the requisite authorities adopt policies that encourage agro-industrial farming and the growth of agribusiness nationally. 2. An increase in agricultural production is relevant for the globe if food security needs to be guaranteed by 2030. There is a need for the government to speed up investment into activities to add and fully realize production value. The government also needs to create and support market mechanisms to facilitate overall value chain control. 3. Increasing the accessibility of finance for investment into hard infrastructure that encourages the probability and cost competitiveness of scaling agricultural production and agribusiness. 4. Develop organised finance amenities which increase the flow of private capital into the agribusiness sector so as to provide adequate financial resources to measure agribusiness

Inhibitors

On the other side, the growth and deepening of agriculture finance markets is constrained by a variety of factors which include: 1. inadequate or ineffective policies 2. high transaction costs to reach remote rural populations 3. covariance of production, market, and price risks 4. absence of adequate instruments to manage risks 5. low levels of demand due to fragmentation and incipient development of value chains 6. lack of expertise of financial institutions in managing agricultural loan portfolios

Paradigms

- It creates a lack of transparency of land ownership and production units. - It makes it possible to circumvent existing regulations. - It undermines farmers’ independence - It impedes the generational transition - It fosters the development of farm corporations operating solely on the basis of salaried work

Experts

- Bruno Larue: Agricultural economics, agricultural policies: bruno.larue@eac.ulaval.ca - John Reilly: Agriculture economics. Air pollution and emissions Biofuels Climate change policy

Timing

- 1800-1870: Level of carbon dioxide gas (CO2) in the atmosphere, as later measured in ancient ice, is about 290 ppm (parts per million). - 1960: Mitchell reports downturn of global temperatures since the early 1940s.=>Modern temp's

Keeling accurately measures CO2 in the Earth's atmosphere and detects an annual rise. =>CO2 greenhouse

- 1985: Ramanathan and collaborators announce that global warming may come twice as fast as expected, from rise of methane and other trace greenhouse gases. - 2000: Global Climate Coalition dissolves as many corporations grapple with threat of warming, but oil lobby convinces US administration to ignore the problem. - 2019: Increasing disasters (tropical cyclones, wildfires, etc.) join scientists' warnings to spur public demonstrations and civil disobedience

Web Resources

- https://www.worldbank.org/en/topic/financialsector/brief/agriculture-finance - https://legal-dictionary.thefreedictionary.com/Agriculture+Subsidies - https://history.aip.org/climate/timeline.htm - https://reliefweb.int/sites/reliefweb.int/files/resources/UNDP_NP-Impact-of-Climate-Change-Finance-in-Agriculture-on-the-Poor.pdf - https://www.arc2020.eu/combating-the-financialisation-of-agriculture-your-land-my-land-our-land/