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From: IRIN <[email protected]>
Date: Thu, May 16, 2013 at 6:35 PM
Subject: Pastoralism's economic contributions are significant but overlooked
To: Elisabeth Janaina <[email protected]>


Pastoralism's economic contributions are significant but overlooked

NAIROBI, 16 May 2013 (IRIN) - Pastoralism is often regarded as an
antiquated practice ill-suited to the modern economy, yet trade
between pastoral communities in Africa - much of it informal and
illegal - generated an estimated US$1 billion each year, according to
a new book [ 
http://www.future-agricultures.org/pastoralism/7666-book-pastoralism-and-development-in-africa
] published by the Futures Agriculture Consortium,.

"If we shift our gaze from the capital cities, where the development
and policy elite congregate, to the regional centers and their
hinterlands where pastoralists live, then a very different perspective
emerges. Here we see the growth of a booming livestock export trade,
the flourishing of the private sector, the expansion of towns with the
inflow of investment, and the emergence of a class of entrepreneurs
commanding a profitable market, and generating employment and other
business opportunities; and all of this driven without a reliance on
external development aid," said the authors of the study.

Pastoralism contributes between 10 and 44 percent of the GDP of
African countries. An estimated 1.3 billion people benefit from
livestock value chain, according to the International Livestock
Research Institute.

"Pastoralism contributes to the livelihoods of millions of people
across Africa, in some of the poorest and most deprived areas. It is a
critical source of economic activity in dryland areas, where other
forms of agriculture are impossible," Ian Scoones, from the Institute
of Development Studies [ http://www.ids.ac.uk/ ], told IRIN.

Ced Hesse, a researcher at the International Institute for Environment
and Development (IIED), told IRIN that in East Africa alone,
"pastoralism directly supports an estimated 20 million people" and
produces "80 percent of the total annual milk supply in Ethiopia,
provides 90 percent of the meat consumed in East Africa, and
contributes 19 percent, 13 percent and 8 percent of GDP in Ethiopia,
Kenya and Uganda, respectively".

He continued, "This is an enormous contribution to the regional
economy, but often is unrecognized."

Invisible

IIED's Hesse explains why little attention is paid to pastoralists'
contributions: "The benefits that pastoralism brings are invisible to
most governments because the methodologies they use for assessing
economic activity and growth, the most popular being GDP, are not
adapted to pastoralism."

"A 'total economic valuation' framework is needed. When
Intergovernmental Authority on Development, IGAD, used this
methodology to calculate the contribution of livestock to the Kenyan
economy, they found livestock's contribution to agricultural GDP is
about two and half times greater than official estimates," Hesse said.

"Kenya's livestock were under appreciated and no attempt to enumerate
it had been made for decades," the IGAD report said.

Experts like Scoones say the rapid urbanization in Africa will
continue to provide increased market opportunities for pastoralists.
Not all will benefit from the direct sale of livestock, but there are
opportunities for diversification.

"There are spin-off benefits from such trade, including opportunities
for engaging in diversified activities, including processing animal
products, providing transport, fodder and marketing support, and
offering services in the growing small towns in pastoral areas,"  said
Scoones.

"Not all those in pastoralist areas can be involved directly in the
growing, vibrant livestock trade that feeds the burgeoning cities
across Africa," Scoones added.

Bad press

Yet other than reports of pastoralists suffering from poverty and
climate-related shocks, pastoralism receives little attention from
national governments or the media.

Of the reporting that does exist, much is negative, according to Media
perceptions and portrayals of Pastoralists in Kenya, India and China [
http://pubs.iied.org/pdfs/14623IIED.pdf ], an April 2013 IIED report.

In Kenya for instance, 93 percent of news articles on pastoralist
analyzed by the authors were about drought and conflict. Fifty-one
percent of articles mentioning conflict presented pastoralist as the
cause of the problems rather than the victims of conflict.

In India, on the other hand, 60 percent of articles reviewed portrayed
pastoralists as victims "who have lost access to grazing land because
of the growth of industrial agriculture, the dominance of more
powerful social groups, and limits to grazing in forested land, among
others."

The bad press has generated calls for pastoralist communities to
change their lifestyles.

Media reports also fail to mention the environmental benefits of
pastoralism, which can contribute to biodiversity conservation [
http://www.pastoralismjournal.com/content/pdf/2041-7136-2-14.pdf ],
and the role it plays in making food systems resilient by, for
example, preventing overreliance on drought- and flood-vulnerable
crops.

"The media tends to portray pastoralists as a source of problem or as
lost causes, yet most media articles about pastoralists do not even
quote the pastoralists themselves. The media portrayals paint a
partial picture, one that rarely mentions the important economic and
environmental benefits of pastoralism, or the way that herder mobility
helps increase the resilience of food systems in a changing climate,
so that even distant consumers in cities benefit," Mike Shanahan,
communication specialist and author of the study, told IRIN.

Minorities Rights Group International observed in its 2012 State of
the World's Minorities and Indigenous Peoples [
http://www.minorityrights.org/11374/state-of-the-worlds-minorities/state-of-the-worlds-minorities-and-indigenous-peoples-2012.html
] report that pastoralists are being forced to abandon their
livelihoods by national governments. Experts see an increase in the
phenomenon of land grabs, in which pastoralists and minority groups
are driven out of their lands to pave the way for development projects
considered more "viable", such as large-scale irrigation projects [
http://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/03066150.2011.652620 ].

Some experts, like IIED's Hesse, say there is a case for modernizing
pastoralism - not in the "sense of settling them or turning them into
ranchers", but by focusing on the "logic of pastoralism's production
strategies that allow it to produce the benefits in arid and semi-arid
environments characterized by rainfall variability."

ko/rz

[END]

This report online: http://www.irinnews.org/report.aspx?reportID=98052



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