In favor of value addition, Uganda just like Tanzania to introduce maize export ban

Geza Ulole

JF-Expert Member
Oct 31, 2009
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It makes no economic sense to ban grain exports
WEDNESDAY MARCH 7 2018


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Workers shell maize at a farm in Uasin Gishu County, Kenya. The idea that a Ugandan or Kenyan farmer, somehow has a special responsibility to feed other Ugandans and Kenyans is quite absurd. FILE PHOTO | NATION

In Summary
  • The idea that a Ugandan or Kenyan farmer, somehow has a special responsibility to feed other Ugandans and Kenyans, while a tea or flower grower is primed to export is, if you think of it, quite absurd.
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By CHARLES ONYANGO-OBBO
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About two weeks ago, Gen Salim Saleh, Uganda’s presidential adviser on military affairs, and co-ordinator of Operation Wealth Creation, pushed for the Uganda government to ban the export of unprocessed grains.

Gen Saleh, who is President Yoweri Museveni’s younger brother, said that, “Due to lack of enforcement of standards and open border policy, Kenya, Rwanda and South Sudanese informal traders flock the villages from border to border in search of low priced unprocessed grains.

“As a result, Kenya, a country always in deficit, formally exports more grain than Uganda. Unless addressed, Uganda will remain a source of cheap, poor quality grain to the region and investors will continue to lose out in spite of their contribution to the national coffers,” he said.

According to Gen Saleh, last November, “Uganda exported more than 600 tonnes of unprocessed sorghum, more than 3,000 tonnes of maize, 9,000 tonnes of beans and 2,000 tonnes of millet.

“A kilogramme of processed maize costs Ush1,500 as opposed to a mere Ush500 farm gate price.”

Let us take it that Saleh’s heart and mind are in the right place. The problem is that his solution is wrong, and goes against the core of the East African Common Market spirit.

I wrote as much in The EastAfrican’s sister paper in Uganda,Daily Monitor.However, I am not a farmer. What I know about East African food markets and dynamics is what I read and I am told. And, of course, my ideological preference for open markets means I would not support a Saleh-like position.

It was therefore heartening to hear from a Ugandan who is on the frontlines of farming and selling to the region.

Let’s hand it over to the man: “I also don’t subscribe to the ban arguments. I have been engaged in maize farming in Busunju Mityana (on 30 acres) for the past 10 years. At the beginning we were getting Ush150-Ush200 per kilogramme of maize i.e. a total of 500kg per acre × Ush200 × 30 acres would earn Ush3,000,000, or equivalent to $817 at the current exchange rate).

“This money was not enough to cover the seeds and labour. It was quite discouraging. Just imagine what the small farmers were going through. The price started going up after the independence of South Sudan. Last year, we sold maize at Ush1,000-Ush1,200 per kilo because of increased demand from Kenya, Malawi etc,” he wrote.

“In Tanzania, particularly under [President John] Magufuli, the government has imposed a total ban on exports to ‘protect’ farmers, ensure adequate domestic food supply and value addition, this has not yielded additional benefits to farmers.

“Research in Tanzania on the effect of the export ban indicate that while the low domestic prices benefit urban consumers, the bans negatively affect farmers’ and traders’ incomes by hindering their access to lucrative prices in international markets.”

And there it is. Banning food exports is little more than a subsidy for urban consumers and food cartels, because then they can buy grain cheaply.

Also, the idea that a Ugandan or Kenyan farmer, somehow has a special responsibility to feed other Ugandans and Kenyans, while a tea or flower grower is primed to export is, if you think of it, quite absurd.

Charles Onyango-Obbo is publisher of Africapaedia and explainer site Roguechiefs.com Twitter@cobbo3

It makes no economic sense to ban grain exports

MY TAKE
This Onyango Obbo is a despot n will remain so. So is he in exile from Uganda. How can he favor exporting raw material at the place of value addition. Does he has even an iota of knowledge in Economics?

Think of how many jobs will be created if Uganda bans export of grains! Think of how much tax will be collected if border smugglers are no more there!

The middlemen have been there all along n have not improved the GoU coffers in form of tax collection n likewise the lives of poor wananchi the end consuumers as the price of a kilo of unga in Nrb and around Kenya is highest in the region to an extent Uhuruto had to subsidize to win voters in the two last year elections.

Open market cum free market cum common market does not mean to allow greedy prevail i.e. having people buy grain in large stocks n swindle in their private storages/silos n play with market price while 4 mln Kenyans have nothing to eat while the price of unga in Kenya is highest in the region.

I concur with Gen. Swalehe with my whole heart. Let Uganda grain give jobs to Ugandans. With good supervision the farmers can benefits with his directives.
 
Survey finds most Tanzanians go hungry, despite government denials
Kizito Makoye
3 Min Read


DAR ES SALAAM, March 7 (Thomson Reuters Foundation) - Most Tanzanians have experienced hunger in the past three months, with food shortages most severe in drought-hit rural areas, a countrywide survey found, despite government denials of a food crisis.

The survey by Tanzanian think tank Twaweza found that 78 percent of people had suffered food shortages in the past three months. In rural areas the figure rose to 84 percent compared to 64 percent in cities.

The findings came despite repeated government denials that the East African country was suffering food shortages. President John Magufuli has accused opposition politicians of fomenting a “fake” hunger crisis.

The Twaweza survey said in a country where 80 percent of the population rely on subsistence farming, some families have begun skipping meals.

In February, 65 percent of respondents had worried about their families not having enough to eat in the previous seven days, compared to 45 percent last September.

The research, part of polling platform Sauti za Wananchi—Africa’s first national survey of its kind, shows a sharp decline in food availability among families in the past three months.

“The current shortages and ongoing food insecurity underline the context of general vulnerability and income poverty,” researchers said.

Drought in East Africa has sent prices of staples such as maize and sorghum soaring, the U.N. Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) said last month.

According to Bank of Tanzania data, the wholesale price of maize, a staple crop has doubled in the past 2 years from 400 Tanzanian shillings in 2015 to 1,253 ($0.60) per kilo in 2017.

Michael Dunford, head of the World Food Programme (WFP) in Tanzania said the U.N. agency is concerned about food insecurity in Tanzania and is monitoring the situation.

“There are pockets of food insecurity in the country. More information will be apparent in the next season,” Dunford said.

He said a recent government assessment identified more than a million people in 55 districts facing acute food insecurity between now and April 2017, before the next harvest in May.

Those in need of urgent food assistance are estimated at over 118,000.

However, Tanzania’s agriculture minister for Charles Tizeba said the situation is manageable.

“We are generally satisfied by various efforts taken to bring this situation under control,” he told the Thomson Reuters Foundation. (Editing by Ros Russell; Please credit the Thomson Reuters Foundation, the charitable arm of Thomson Reuters, that covers humanitarian news, women’s rights, trafficking, resilience and climate change. Visit news.trust.org)

Survey finds most Tanzanians go hungry, despite government denials
 
Hunger rates remain high amid conflict, climate shocks, warns UN food security report
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FAO/Hkun Lat
A girl runs through deserted farmland in Mynmar's Sagaing region where floods buried valuable fertile soil under several feet of mud which later dried hard and cracked, making land preparations very difficult and expensive.
5 March 2018
Climate Change
Increased hunger and food insecurity, fuelled by conflict and climatic challenges, continues to inflict suffering on populations in different parts of the world, forcing them to remain dependent on humanitarian assistance, a new United Nations report has warned.

According to the Crop Prospects and Food Situation report, issued Monday by the UN Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO), the need for external food assistance in 37 countries – either affected by conflict or adverse climate shocks – remains unchanged compared to the situation three months back.

“Civil war and insecurity are direct reasons for high hunger rates in 16 of those countries, ranging from Burundi to Yemen,” said FAO in a news release announcing the findings.

“Conflict is displacing millions of people, hampering agricultural activities and, in many cases, also driving basic food prices up sharply,” it added.

At the same time, inadequate and erratic rainfall is also posing a growing threat to food security in southern and eastern Africa, where many rural households have suffered from four consecutive drought-affected agricultural seasons.

In Somalia, aggregated cereal production for the country’s “deyr” rainy season is estimated at 20 per cent below average, and similar pattern in rainfall and yields has been observed in north-eastern Tanzania.

Furthermore, prices of staple cereals such as wheat, millet or sorghum continued to remain high as a result of removal of subsidies, increased demand, and weakening of currencies.

In the Democratic Republic of Congo, for instance, inflation pushed prices to more than double in 2017 to a 42 percent annual rate.

Another factor driving up prices was the disruption of traditional trade routes due to violence, such as in and around the Sahel, as a result of which countries dependent on these routes (such as Libya) witnessed much higher prices as well as facing food shortages.
 
Obbo's pay cheque comes from Kenyan media, so he has to be nice to them sometimes.
 
The bans are good coz now the Gort will prioritize irrigation. By the way Uganda is making food money from maize sales. Necessity...
 
“Research in Tanzania on the effect of the export ban indicate that while the low domestic prices benefit urban consumers, the bans negatively affect farmers’ and traders’ incomes by hindering their access to lucrative prices in international markets.”
:rolleyes:
 
Wawekeze kwenye viwanda vyao kwanza. Wasije fata mkondo wa ndugu zao waswahili. Mahindi yao yote, chenji kidogo baada ya wao kula mahindi choma kwa pilipili, yanaoza kule kwenye magala. Kipaumbele chao kilikuwa ni cherehani kadhaa hapa na pale kwanza.
 
Wawekeze kwenye viwanda vyao kwanza. Wasije fata mkondo wa ndugu zao waswahili. Mahindi yao yote, chenji kidogo baada ya wao kula mahindi choma kwa pilipili, yanaoza kule kwenye magala. Kipaumbele chao kilikuwa ni cherehani kadhaa hapa na pale kwanza.
Acha usamaki nyangau sisi tukila mahindi ya kuchoma na pilipili INA kuwashia nini wewe mkikuyu tena mahindi mabichi ya kuchoma yanavilutubisho zaidi ya unga wa ugali ,wakenya wanaumia mioyo wakisikia watz
MAHINDI CHOMA + PILIPILI + NDIMU maana kwao kunanjaa wanaona kama tunachezea chakula
 
Wawekeze kwenye viwanda vyao kwanza. Wasije fata mkondo wa ndugu zao waswahili. Mahindi yao yote, chenji kidogo baada ya wao kula mahindi choma kwa pilipili, yanaoza kule kwenye magala. Kipaumbele chao kilikuwa ni cherehani kadhaa hapa na pale kwanza.
Unfortunately they are to start with export ban first as milling firms are already there what's needed is to increase milling capacity!
 
Acha usamaki nyangau sisi tukila mahindi ya kuchoma na pilipili INA kuwashia nini wewe mkikuyu tena mahindi mabichi ya kuchoma yanavilutubisho zaidi ya unga wa ugali ,wakenya wanaumia mioyo wakisikia watz
MAHINDI CHOMA + PILIPILI + NDIMU maana kwao kunanjaa wanaona kama tunachezea chakula
Imekuuma sana na swag zako za mahindi choma. Ukikuyuni wanakula mihogo, viazi vitamu, ndizi, mahindi, yote choma, tena kwa wingi sana, ila hiyo pilipili na ndimu, kwao ni ushamba tu. Unarembesha ndio iwe chipsi mayai au? Kula mahindi choma kama mwanaume buana! :D
 
Imekuuma sana na swag zako za mahindi choma. Ukikuyuni wanakula mihogo, viazi vitamu, ndizi, mahindi, yote choma, tena kwa wingi sana, ila hiyo pilipili na ndimu, kwao ni ushamba tu. Unarembesha ndio iwe chipsi mayai au? Kula mahindi choma kama mwanaume buana! :D
Wangekuwa wazungu ndo wanakula pilipili na ndimu kwenye mahindi mngewa sifia na kuiga kama mnavyo mnavyo waiga kuvaa suti na tai wakati mnaishi kwenye dampo la kibera mnanuka kama fungo huku mmevaa suti tena nimekuta hata Nairobi mmsanza kuiga tz kula mahindi na pilipili. na ndimu
 
Wangekuwa wazungu ndo wanakula pilipili na ndimu kwenye mahindi mngewa sifia na kuiga kama mnavyo mnavyo waiga kuvaa suti na tai wakati mnaishi kwenye dampo la kibera mnanuka kama fungo huku mmevaa suti tena nimekuta hata Nairobi mmsanza kuiga tz kula mahindi na pilipili. na ndimu
Tabia ya wahindi hiyo, waswahili mlichokivumbua sitaweza kukitaja hapa.
 
N
Salaale! Hii menu ya kuongeza mawowowo inawajumuisha na wanaume pia? :cool:
Nakuona wewe gay aka choko la Mombasa unasubili Kwa hamu jibu kama chips yai inaongeza wowowo Kwa wanaume au la ngoja nikupe jibu
Ukizila chipsyai usitumie ndimu na pilipili ili upate matokeo chanya ya kuongeza wowowo lako au tumia ARV m
 
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