2SCALE Thematic Papers Not By Technology and Money Alone | Page 6
Overview of the stories and related cross-cutting themes
PPPs:
Commodity-country
Relationship building
PO and SME
Soya – Benin
Cluster
Market &
Farm-firm
✻
Functional CS
enabling
technical
improvements
Organisa-
tional
Empowerment
Sustainability
of support
services
Gender and
youth
✻
Soya – Ghana ✻ ✻ ✻
Rice – Benin ✻ ✻ ✻
Rice – Nigeria ✻ ✻ Vegetables – Benin ✻ ✻ ✻ ✻ ✻
✻ ✻ ✻ ✻
✻
Vegetables – Nigeria
Cassava – Nigeria ✻
Sorghum – Nigeria 1 ✻
Pineapple – Benin
✻
Sesame – Mali Maize – Nigeria ✻ ✻
✻ ✻
✻ ✻ ✻
✻ ✻
✻ ✻
✻ ✻ ✻
✻ ✻
Dairy – Nigeria
Maize – Benin
✻
✻
✻
✻
HPW – Ghana
Maize – Mali
✻
✻
✻
✻
✻
✻
✻
✻
✻
✻
✻
✻
✻
✻
1 This partnership is not part of the 2SCALE programme but of the Sorghum and Millet in the Sahel (SMS) project, funded by the BMG foundation;
the SMS project uses the 2SCALE methodology including ICRA’s CS approach and involves ICRA’s trainer-mentor associate Lazarus Yarima (author
of the story).
tion and insights into market trends, which allow the PO
to negotiate fair deals with the company, and in time
even without the direct backing of the partnership faci-
litator or trainer-mentor.
Support services need to be sustainable without
project support
Six of the fifteen stories report on the business actors’
interest in continuing with providing support and coach-
ing services to the ABCs beyond 2SCALE. This is how-
ever not a straightforward process given the fact that
all coaches’ activities have until now mainly been fund-
ed by the 2SCALE programme. As presented in the
Dairy-Nigeria story, “external” coaches are now handing
over tasks to “internal” coaches, and at the same time
finding a way to commercialise their role within the
business of the clusters. For example, by becoming a
part-time input provider or milk transporter, they can
remain associated with the cluster and at the same
time be in the position to continue to provide functional
business support services when needed by the cluster.
The Maize-Nigeria story also relates to this theme, as
farmers and other cluster actors develop strategies to
be able to pay for CS services themselves. The issue
of integrating coaching services into the cost structure
of the value chain (“embedding” the services) is also
described in terms of internal coaches in the Pineapple-
Benin and Maize-Mali stories, where plans are taking
shape to deduct a small amount of the price of raw ma-
terials to fund coaching services.
Women and youths make good business too
Six of the fifteen stories specifically provide a gender or
youth employment perspective on the development of
the agribusiness, both important themes to rural agri-
cultural development processes. The Sorghum-Nigeria
story shows the importance of women farmer cooper-
atives and their negotiation power with the sorghum
aggregators. Two stories show an evolution towards
strong female-headed SMEs, for parboiled rice (Rice-
Benin) and soya processing (Soya-Ghana). Two other
stories describe how enhanced growing practices and
related business development in Benin vegetables and
Nigerian rice sectors can help youth return to the village
and become entrepreneurs.
The editors,
Mundie Salm, Marie-Jo Dugué and Toon Defoer
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