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FAO Investment Centre Taking Action for the World’s Poor and Hungry People Beijing, China 17-19 October 2007 Session 3: Targeting the Poor – Policies and.

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Presentation on theme: "FAO Investment Centre Taking Action for the World’s Poor and Hungry People Beijing, China 17-19 October 2007 Session 3: Targeting the Poor – Policies and."— Presentation transcript:

1 FAO Investment Centre Taking Action for the World’s Poor and Hungry People Beijing, China 17-19 October 2007 Session 3: Targeting the Poor – Policies and Programmes Investments to support hunger reduction Michael Wales, Principal Adviser, FAO Investment Centre

2 FAO Investment Centre World Food Summit Plan of Action Commitment Six: “... promote optimal allocation and use of public and private investments to foster human resources, sustainable food, agriculture, fisheries and forestry systems, and rural development, in high and low potential areas.”

3 FAO Investment Centre International Alliance Against Hunger Wide range of stakeholders pledging to end hunger Twin-track approach: –Focus on agricultural and rural development as engine of growth and –Direct action against hunger Right to Food Message: Investment in agriculture is essential and can be effective

4 FAO Investment Centre Priorities for investment FAO’s Anti-Hunger Programme: Improving agricultural productivity of small farmers Developing and conserving natural resources Rural infrastructure and market access Capacity for knowledge generation and dissemination Access to food for the most needy

5 FAO Investment Centre Scale of investment needed? Anti-Hunger Programme: US$24 billion per year –Benefits: US$120 billion per year Comprehensive Africa Agriculture Development Programme (CAADP): US$251 billion over 15 years US$13 billion per year incremental investment

6 FAO Investment Centre FAO Programmes with governments National Programmes for Food Security: –access –availability –utilisation –15 countries, US$1.2 billion committed Regional Programmes for Food Security: –Policy & institutional environment –21 Regional Economic Organizations

7 FAO Investment Centre Lessons learnt Agricultural growth hunger reduction Hunger reduction development & poverty reduction Technology can contribute Trade can contribute Peace and stability are essential Public investment is essential Development assistance often misplaced

8 FAO Investment Centre Investment climate Public investment creating a favourable climate for private investment: –legal frameworks –grades & standards –essential rural infrastructure Quality of public spending Promoting profitable partnerships: –small farmers & cooperatives –agribusinesses –government

9 FAO Investment Centre Private investment Small farmers the biggest investors –Obstacles: credit, land tenure, transport, low prices, outside supply chains, natural hazards Traders, agro-processors, transnational agribusinesses in value chain –Obstacles: unpredictable business environment, poor infrastructure, high costs Foreign Direct Investment –agriculture <1% of FDI to developing countries

10 FAO Investment Centre Effective development assistance Effective partnerships: Government commitment of resources –e.g Maputo Declaration 10% Donors –committing resources to agriculture –keeping agriculture on the agenda –harmonization – national programmes –aid effectiveness – Paris Declaration Non-traditional donors –China, Brazil, India, Foundations

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12 The 3 Pillars of the GDPRD Outreach Shared learning Aid effectiveness


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