Fiscal year 2016-17 (the most recent period for which official statistics are available) proved to be fruitful for Pakistan’s agricultural sector. A 3.45% growth was recorded (growth rate in FY2015-16 was a dismal 0.27%) on the back of government-led interventions in the form of the Prime Minister’s Rs 341 billion Kissan Package, as well as relief measures in the Federal Budget. These included direct cash assistance to farmers, improved availability of water through reduced tariffs on electric tube wells, increased credit disbursements to the tune of Rs 700 billion, subsidised fertiliser prices and reductions in customs duties on the import of machinery for the dairy, livestock, poultry and cold chain sectors.
As Pakistan faces the twin challenges of a rapidly growing population contributing to increasing food insecurity and a deteriorating balance of trade, improving agricultural output is no longer optional. The advantage is that Pakistan has (and in abundance) all the natural resources required to address these problems and propel the country to a position of dominance in the global agriculture industry.
Agri and food experts interviewed by Aurora were of the opinion that if agriculture is to realise its potential, the key challenges undermining performance have to be resolved.
It would not be an exaggeration to say that the agricultural sector has been the lifeline of Pakistan’s economy since Partition. According to the Pakistan Economic Survey 2016-17, agriculture contributed 19.5% to Pakistan’s GDP, employed 42% of the labour force and (along with ancillary industries) provided livelihood to 62% of the population and constituted 65% of export earnings. Given the current economic outlook, the last statistic is of particular significance. In FY2016-17, the trade deficit hit an all-time high of $32.6 billion and economic experts are of the view that boosting the volume (and more importantly, the quality and value) of agricultural output will be crucial in stabilising and strengthening the economy.
The question is what needs to be done to accomplish this. Organisations and brands working within the agricultural and related industries in Pakistan are of the view that the answer is in developing and streamlining farm to fork linkages.
A value chain focus
The simplest definition of a value chain is a set of inter-connected activities that contribute to value-addition in products and link commodity producers to processors, markets and consumers. An agricultural value chain includes the dissemination of plant and animal genetic material, input supplies, production on the farm, provision of technologies for post-harvest processing and handling, grading criteria and facilities, cooling and packing technologies, storage, transportation and distribution systems and finance and credit facilities.
Pakistan’s agricultural value chain (like most developing countries) is characterised by dual value chains for the same commodity that operate in parallel; in other words, informal (traditional) and formal (modern). Small farms (the majority of landholdings in Pakistan), are typically involved in the informal chain that delivers low-quality, low-price products (in limited quantities) either to middlemen or small markets which yield low returns. Formal value chains deliver the same products, but of far superior quality (in bulk) and which are priced higher and sold to commercial wholesalers and exporters.
In the case of rice for instance, the only crop grown with an export focus and which accounts for three percent of the value added in agriculture and 0.6% of GDP, the informal chain comprises small-scale farmers who bring their rice paddies to auction markets known as mandis. Here, the grain is sold to huskers and shellers who remove the husk and the top bran layer and sell the semi-finished rice to processors who clean and grade it according to size and colour. Middlemen, who work on commissions, are involved in the transactions across mandis and as a result, farmers who bring unprocessed rice paddies to market, barely earn enough to support their families and prepare for the next growing season.