New Directions for Agriculture in Reducing Poverty

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RE: Follow-up to prizes for innovation



To continue this thread, this proposal is distinctive in that the criteria for 
prize distribution are precisely what Elisabeth Katz suggests.  The "prize 
authority" would specify a set of rules, notably the kinds of experimental 
evidence needed to quantify gains and the kinds of survey evidence 
needed to document adoption, by which to estimate total economic gains.  The 
whole idea is that prizes would would be paid proportionally to economic 
impact: the larger the impact, the larger the prize payment.

Cheers,

Will Masters



-----Original Message-----
From: Elisabeth Katz [mailto:<address removed> 
Sent: Sunday, May 02, 2004 10:59 AM
To: <address removed>
Subject: AW: Follow-up to prizes for innovation



Dear discussion participants
 
Just a short reply to Will Master's prizes for agricultural innovations. I like 
the suggestion of p
rizes to encourage agricultural innovations. But I wonder what may be the 
criteria for prize distri
bution. I have not read the paper about the prizes, so may be I am just telling 
things which are al
ready stated there. In my view only innovations which have been adopted by a 
larger number of reall
y poor farmers over a couple of years and which are proven to have improved the 
livelihoods of thes
e farmers should get prizes. From my experience the constraint is generally not 
the development of 
innovations (of course there are exceptions), but of innovations which are 
practical and can be ada
pted and adopted by large number of farmers, without too much external support 
and inputs.
 
Best regards
Elisabeth Katz
 

*******************************
Swiss Centre for Agricultural Extension and Rural Development 
Department for International Cooperation 
Eschikon 28
8315 Lindau (Switzerland) 
Ph. 0041-52-354 97 35 
Fax  .... 354 97 97 
 <mailto:<address removed>> <address removed> 
 <http://www.lbl.ch/int> www.lbl.ch/int
******************************

-----Ursprüngliche Nachricht-----
Von: <address removed>
[mailto:<address removed> Auftrag von Will Masters
Gesendet: Mittwoch, 28. April 2004 20:15
An: <address removed>;
<address removed>
Cc: <address removed>
Betreff: Follow-up to Michael Lipton posting: prizes for innovation



Below is a posting I sent earlier today to the Science and Technology list, 
that I think responds d
irectly to Michael Lipton's challenge to the Growth and Poverty group.  
 
If DfID and other donors are to focus on raising the primary productivity of 
the poorest people, on
e important tool will be the introduction of new funding mechanisms.  The 
"invention" of the CGIAR 
in the 1960s was a great achievement that unlocked a lot of other funding and 
delivered extraordina
ry results, but the subsequent decline in support to agriculture tells us 
something important about
 the limitations of the mix of institutions that are now available to donors.  
 
To raise funding levels now, having a new and different way to reward 
accomplishments would be help
ful.  My own proposal for a additional funding mechanism that could complement 
other institutions, 
improve effectiveness and raise funding levels is a way to pay "prizes" for 
agricultural innovation
s.  I won't explain the approach here -- a short journal article is available 
on-line, at:

www.agbioforum.org/v6n12/v6n12a14-masters.htm
<http://www.agbioforum.org/v6n12/v6n12a14-masters.htm> 
and there is also a two-page summary and a longer journal article explaining 
the concept on my webs
ite:  <http://www.earth.columbia.edu/cgsd/masters-news>
www.earth.columbia.edu/cgsd/masters-news
 
Perhaps the growth-and-poverty list members would like to comment on how a new 
funding device, perh
aps prizes in particular, can help re-invigorate support for what Michael 
Lipton quite rightly call
s Plan A.
 
Will Masters
 
-----Original Message-----
From: Will Masters 
Sent: Wednesday, April 28, 2004 9:58 AM
To: <address removed>
Subject: "Demand-led" versus "supply-led" innovation 


Colleagues, I'm glad that the science and technology portion of this exchange 
is heating up!  I wou
ld like to applaud Dana Dalrymple's latest posting, and would add the following:
 
Ultimately, all successful innovation must fill users' needs, or else it will 
not be adopted.  But 
this does NOT mean that the users can or should be "leading" the innovation, or 
even that users mus
t participate directly in the innovation process.  Of course end-users must 
participate in the fina
l stages of refinement of any innovation, but to the extent that the whole 
innovation process is ma
de demand-led and participatory, it will be pursuing approaches that are 
already known and availabl
e to the users: in other words, it won't be as innovative as it might be.  One 
can think of a conti
nuum, from what users know and can do to what specialized researchers know and 
can do.  It seems cl
ear to me that poor farmers know more than anyone else can possibly know about 
their own circumstan
ces: what they can't do is how to make large changes in the available 
technology, through new crop 
genetics, new mechanical devices, etc.
 
As I see it, the key question is whether specialist innovators have a real 
incentive to meet users'
 needs.  If they do, they will use their specialized knowledge and skills to do 
something genuinely
 new, something that the users can use but couldn't make for themselves.  Dana 
Dalrymple's "supply-
led" innovators have been successful where users' needs are relatively easy for 
outsiders to see.  
To make a gross generalization, I think this was more the case for the large 
and relatively homogen
eous cultivation systems that benefited from the past green revolutions, than 
it is for the patchy,
 agro-pastoral systems of Africa and parts of South Asia, the Andes, etc. that 
have not yet experie
nced a green revolution, and where it is not at all obvious to anyone what 
technologies are likely 
to work best.
 
So, how to reward innovators to produce what users need, but can't make for 
themselves?  One propos
al is to introduce some "pull" mechanisms for the funding of research, to 
complement the "push" mec
hanisms by which donors fund projects and programs.  The terminology is due to 
Michael Kremer, who 
considers pull mechanisms to be all payments that are tied to adoption and
impact: most notably that would be royalties from patents, but it would also 
include "prize" paymen
ts paid for public domain technologies.  
 
The trick in designing a pull mechanism is how to compute the value of 
payments, and make a low-tra
nsaction cost mechanism for donors to reward innovators.  A particular proposal 
for how to do this 
is detailed in a recent journal article, available on-line at: 
http://www.agbioforum.org/v6n12/v6n1
2a14-masters.htm
<http://www.agbioforum.org/v6n12/v6n12a14-masters.htm> 
I won't go into details here -- there are also longer write-ups of the proposal 
available on my own
 website, at: http://  <http://www.earth.columbia.edu/cggsd/masters-news>
www.earth.columbia.edu/cgsd/masters-news
 
I know that DfID has been interested in the pull mechanisms in the past -- 
indeed their work with M
ichael Kremer stimulated the work that is referenced above.  I would be very 
keen to hear what the 
 community is now thinking about this kind of payment device, and its potential 
to help answer the 
question of how to make R&D more demand-led, without losing its innovative 
character.
 
Will Masters
 ------------------------------------------
William A. Masters
Center on Globalization and Sustainable Development,
The Earth Institute at Columbia University  
<http://www.earth.columbia.edu/cgsd/masters>
http://www.earth.columbia.edu/cgsd/masters

Visiting Professor of International and Public Affairs, Columbia University

Professor of Agricultural Economics,
Purdue University
------------------------------------------




-----Original Message-----
From: Michael & Merle Lipton [mailto:<address removed> 
Sent: Wednesday, April 28, 2004 12:12 PM
To: <address removed>;
<address removed>
Cc: <address removed>
Subject: Fwd: Re: Agricultural e-forum


Dear all,




I have been following several of the Group discussion fora with interest. There 
are many thoughtful
, useful contributions. But I am depressed by the fact that few contributors 
are following up on wh
at seems to me to be the main point, and the central lesson of history for 
initial mass poverty red
uction. It is that without sustained initial, employment-intensive, 
smallholder-based yield growth 
in agriculture, probably focusing initially on food staples - call it Plan A - 
the remaining heartl
ands of world poverty will not reduce it much. Hence the issue for development 
actions in general, 
and for UK aid policy in particular - if these aim to cut poverty in its 
heartlands - is what polic
ies can implement Plan A. It is not what alternatives there might be in 
la-la-land.  


First, the central fact, and an important proviso. 
Fact: over 90% of the dollar-poor are in sub-Saharan Africa and S and E Asia, 
and over 70% are rura
l. Though almost all of them obtain income from many sources, much the most 
important is agricultur
e, and non-farm growth is seldom robust (or povery reducing) until dermand from 
agriculture grows. 
Ravallion's projection is that over half the world's poor will be rural until 
2035.

Proviso: Non-farm expansion is increasingly the main way to reduce, and fairly 
soon to remove, extr
eme dollar poverty where there have already been 10-20 years of 3%+ 
agricultural yield growth (usua
lly starting with food
staples) that is smallholder-based and employment-intensive. Demand from small 
farmers and labourer
s, fuelled by agricultural progress, in turn sets off rapid non-farm growth. 
This has happened in l
arge parts of East Asia and some parts of South Asia.

First, however, affordable demand for the labour of the rural poor 
(accompanying, of course, measur
es to raise their educational, skill and health levels) are needed. The rural 
poor have multi-facet
ed livelihoods, but, almost always, only yield expansion in agriculture - 
overwhelmingly the main c
omponent of those livelihoods - can provide such extra livelihoods initially 
where mass rural pover
ty prevails.

So: how can Plan A be implemented? Most of the remaining poverty heartlands 
have little water contr
ol, especially in sub-Saharan Africa, and have so far gained little from the 
Green Revolution. Aid 
to agriculture, and (except in parts of Asia, and including within the CG 
syastem) finance of publi
c-purpose research aimed directly to improve crop productivity and robustness, 
have collapsed. Stap
les yield growth in the developing world has fallen from about 3%/year in the 
early 1980s to around
 1%/year recently. 

So it will not be easy to revive agricultural growth in the poverty heartlands, 
Yet, given agricult
ure's role in employment-income and consumption for most of the world's 
dollar-poor, there is no ho
pe of meeting the MDG to halve poverty in 1990-2015 unless that happens. One 
requirement - of cours
e not the only one - is that aid to small-farm and employment-intensive 
agriculture revives sharply
. (All aid to agriculture has fallen by over 60% in absolute terms since the 
late 1980s, folloowing
 a previous sharpl fall from the late 1970s; the falls are mostly due to 
agriculture's plummeting p
riority within sector-specific aid, not to the rise of structural adjustment 
assistance).  A UK lea
d, combined with the renewed concern of other donors on this matter, could be 
crucial to the reviva
l. Obviously, how we do it is at least as important as that we do it. It is 
right that these fora f
ocus on the 'how'. Aid has to be is directed to the right targets to benefit 
the poor (which includ
e producing items in sufficient demand, local or foreign); and aid has to be 
reasonably well based 
in the will of recipient societies and governments, e.g. as expressed in the 
(currently rather sect
or-free) PRSPs, so that extra aid claws in, rather than drives out, domestic 
effort.But let's not b
e so concerned to discuss and differ on the difficulties, that we lose sight of 
the central point -
 the case for a DfiD focus on Plan A. This means dated targets for reviving the 
proportion of aid f
rom the UK,  and if attainable for EU and the World Bank, supporting - in a 
broad sense - smallhold
er and employment-intensive farming.

Otherwise - without extra demand for the labour services of the rural poor, 
which in the initial st
ages, and in the remaining recalcitrant poverty heartlands, can come affordably 
only from small-sca
le agriculture - there is little hope of big poverty reductions in the parts of 
the world that have
 NOT, so far, had either poverty reduction or substantial progress in farm 
income or in yields of f
ood staples. 
The rising worker-to-dependent ratios in the poverty heartlands in 2000-2040 
can be a wonderful opp
ortunity for a farm-income-led attack on poverty, increasingly feeding into 
off-farm income diversi
fication, as happened in East Asia in 1970-90. Or, without sustained yield 
growth, the opportunity 
can turn into an employment and poverty debacle. 

Which will happen? It depends in large part on trade policies in OECD, on 
domestic responses in the
 poverty heartland nations, and on the priorities within farm science. But aid 
plays a big role, es
pecially since aid policy affects all these other things too. What should the 
UK do in this context
? How should it seek to influence EU and the World Bank? How do we get to 
targets for aid to agricu
lture and farm research over the next 5-10 years, and for steering that aid to 
the needs of the poo
rest: policies that prioritise small farms and employment income, water control 
and better seeds fo
r more robust farming, and poor people's access to bigger shares of farmland 
(including via orderly
 land reforms) and farm water? 

It would be useful if we could re-inject an emphasis on these central points 
into the fascinating b
ut, inevitably with many participants and fora, perhaps not yet sufficiently 
focused discussions. 


Best wishes for our work!

Michael Lipton

P.S. Here is a list of issues I have sent to Sarah Hartwell, for the interview 
to which her Select 
Committee on DfID agricultural policy has asked me. (Sorry for some overlap 
with the above.)
(a) 55-60% of the world's dollar-poor depend on agriculture for their 
livelihood.
(b) Historically, almost all initial mass poverty reduction - most recently and 
strikingly in large
 parts of Asia in 1965-90 -began with big, employment-intensive productivity 
gains on small farms.

(c) Non-farm growth, while crucial to poverty reduction later, first needs 
demand from small farms 
and so has hardly ever created enough affordable workplaces to initiate early  
mass poverty reducti
on.
(d) A unique opportunity for accelerated poverty reduction - yet also a great 
risk of an unemployme
nt surge, deepening poverty - is created by the rapidly rising worker/dependent 
ratios (due to shar
p post-1980 fertility
falls) in Asia and Africa, and only small-farm growth strategies are likely to 
seize the opportunit
y. 
(e) Yet since the 1980s there have been sharp (and non-coincidental) falls in 
---yield growth in ma
in food staples in developing counties; 
---aid to agriculture; 
---public-purpose research into raising productivity of main staples; and 
---the rate and spread of dollar-poverty reduction. 
(f) These setbacks are despite big falls in price bias against agriculture in 
many developing count
ries - and are partly due to OECD policies on farm trade, aid, and science.
(g) The forms of aid required to improve the impact of agriculture on
poverty reduction are fairly   familiar, but little-discussed. Central
issues include:
--possible need for specific commitments to raise volume, and share, of UK aid 
reaching small-scale
 farming, given the above  facts; --the use of aid to address the water crisis, 
especially since ab
sence of water control is the main obstacle to progress on small farms in 
Africa; --how to steer mo
re aid to agricultural (especially seed) research that favours production and 
employment of the poo
r; --how to increase UK aid's impact in improving the poverty focus, and in 
raising the amount, of 
support for agriculture via multilateral agencies; --prospects for aid in 
support of well-conceived
 programmes to redistribute, where feasible consensually, farmland and water to 
the poor; --how to 
use aid or other means to improve the prospects that globalisation benefits, 
rather than harms, sma
ll and remote farms, given the increasing role of supermarkets, horticultural 
multinationals, and f
ood and labour grades and standards; and --how to ensure that aid complements, 
rather than drives o
ut, domestic private and public investment in agriculture. 






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