It is time to
go back to the basics; the government should resuscitate the agro-industry from
grassroots farming. The youths should be encouraged and incentivized to take to
farming. They should be given loans either interest-free or with very low
interest. The United States government gives so much to its farmers to keep the
industry alive and food prices low.
Global Food Commodity
prices declined in 2021, recording a second consecutive decline, according to a
United Nations benchmark report released recently. Accordingly, the Food and
Agriculture Organization price index ended July with 123 points, showing that
it shed 1.2% of the previous month’s numbers. Compared to similar period in
2020, however, the 123 points was still 31% higher. The index, which tracks
changes in the international prices of “the most globally traded food
commodities” indicates that the July drop came mostly from cereals, vegetable
oils, and dairy products.
According to the report, the Food and Agriculture
Organization Cereal Price Index was 3% lower in July than in June 2021. This
came as a result of a 6% decline in the price of maize on a month-on-month
basis. That price decline in maize was the result of better-than-expected
yields in Argentina and improved production prospects in the United States of
America. Production from those two places was more than enough to douse the
effect of production concerns in Brazil.
In Nigeria, According to Africanews, “Nigerian families struggle to survive as food prices soar.” According
to the publication, food prices have risen 22% in Nigeria since the start of
the Covid 19 pandemic.
It is
unthinkable that a country like Nigeria, with so much arable land, will have
citizens that are caving in under the weight of increasing food prices. Unlike
Argentina and the United States of America, where the Food and Agriculture Organization has projected that
the prospect for improved supplies will reduce food prices further, the
Nigerian situation is one where the activities of herdsmen, terrorists, and
bandits have the potential of internalizing hunger in the country by sending
food prices to the sky and out of the reach of those who need it most, due to
the food scarcity that such miscreants are causing.
Nigerian youths are not helping matters though, as everyone
seems to want a white-collar job. Farming is seen as something for peasants or
those who never went to school. Not too long ago, the Director-General of the
FAO, Qu Dongyu, while addressing the Y20 summit, noted that “the future of food belongs to the young people of today.”
Recalling the
past, I remember how my father paid my school fees in those days with money
from palm oil. As I look back to the same lands from where my dad harvested
those palm fruits, the palm trees have all died with no replacements. The
agricultural sector in Nigeria is a cash cow calling for attention, but the
Nigerian government and people forgot about agriculture the moment oil was
discovered, and we are now paying dearly for it.
Nigerian youths
should take to farming with pride, after all, there is dignity in labour. We
cannot sit and watch food prices bring hunger to the dinner table of Nigerians,
while uncultivated lands lie fallow, profiting no one.
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