It is Machiavellian for official government documents and discourse to refer to our smallholder farmers, the majority of Ugandans, as peasants and or as subsistence farmers.

This mis-characterization of the majority of Ugandans is the basis of flawed policy that is sustaining a vicious cycle of poverty in our nation.

Truth is the majority of us are net buyers of food.  As in we buy more food than we sell; meaning that we produce and sell and then buy to eat.

In the neoliberal economic order that our nation-sate has embraced, we must of necessity fend for ourselves. And to do so, we need to have cash.

We need cash for paying for social services, such as school fees and health care services. And we need cash to buy food.

Bugisu is in the Eastern Region. From the East to the North-East and throughout the country, smallholder farmers are producing for the market – the local, the regional and also for the global.

Majority farming household, I dare say nearly all households in Uganda, are engaged in commercial agriculture. We proactively grow and sell food. We grow and sell food intra-community and inter-community.

Unfortunately, because of the mis-characterization of the famers that feed our nation as subsistence farmers, policy and official government documents contain mal prescriptions for farming households.

Mal prescriptions that:

  • Unduly focus on destroying indigenous production knowledge systems; and promoted adoption of inappropriate exogenous knowledge systems.
  • Are silent on the real issues that need addressing such as farm-gate prices, protection of our produce from imported cheap subsidized produce.

An urgent re-think is needed. Duty bearers urgently need to go back to the drawing table, so to speak.

One response to “We are net buyers of food”

  1. […] encourage and force farmers to grow to sell, then buy to eat; creating an undesirable status quo of Ugandan farmers now mostly being net buyers of food – they spend more to purchase food than they receive in sales of food that they produce over a […]

    Like

Let’s Chat…

RECOMMENDED

Discover more from the Humanist view

Subscribe now to keep reading and get access to the full archive.

Continue reading