A Strategy for Technology Development for Semi-Arid Sub-Saharan Africa

This article proposes a strategy for agricultural technology development for semi-arid West Africa. The strategy evaluation consists of two aspects: a) a review of the successes in the region; and b) analysis with mathematical programming of the potential impacts and constraints to various new technologies tested in the region. The technology development strategy indicates how further productivity gains can be made by responding to the two principal constraints of water availability and soil fertility. These constraints must be simultaneously resolved but the strategy needs to be adapted for different soil characteristics and economic environments. The major emphasis is on the importance of the rapid introduction of inorganic fertilizers combined with techniques to increase water availability; organic and inorganic fertilizers need to be considered complements in the semi-arid regions. Farmers are already introducing labour intensive variations of these techniques in the most degraded regions. The policy concern is to encourage government policymakers to put a high priority on fertilizer and increase the availability of inorganic fertilizer while research efforts continue to develop improved methods for complementary use of organic fertilizer.

[1]  V. Kelly The economics of agricultural technology in semi-arid Sub-Saharan Africa , 1996 .

[2]  D. Southgate,et al.  Resource Degradation in Africa and Latin America: Population Pressure, Policies, and Property Arrangements , 1990 .

[3]  J. Sanders,et al.  Developing New Agricultural Technologies for the Sahelian Countries: The Burkina Faso Case , 1990, Economic Development and Cultural Change.

[4]  Willem A. Stoop,et al.  Changes in West African Savanna agriculture in response to growing population and continuing low rainfall , 1990 .

[5]  S. Carr Technology for Small-Scale Farmers in Sub-Saharan Africa: Experience With Food Crop Production in Five Major Ecological Zones , 1990 .

[6]  Derek Byerlee,et al.  Farmers' Stepwise Adoption of Technological Packages: Evidence from the Mexican Altiplano , 1986 .

[7]  Barry I. Shapiro,et al.  Evaluating and adapting new technologies in a high-risk agricultural system—Niger , 1993 .

[8]  J. Sanders,et al.  Population pressure, land degradation and sustainable agricultural technologies in the Sahel , 1992 .

[9]  M. Blackie Sub-Saharan Africa: from crisis to sustainable growth: International Bank for reconstruction and development, Washington DC: The World Bank, 1989. 300 pp. Price: US$12.95 (paperback). ISBN 0-8213-1349-5. , 1991 .

[10]  P. Matlon Improving Productivity in Sorghum and Pearl Millet in Semi-Arid Africa , 1990 .

[11]  Robert H. Bates,et al.  Markets and States in Tropical Africa. The Political Basis of Agricultural Policies , 1981 .