Prøve GULL - Gratis

Integrated Financing For Smallholder Farmers

Farmer's Weekly

|

Farmer's Weekly 21-28 December 2018

Africa’s agricultural potential can only be realised if smallholders gain access to finance. But loans cannot be focused on just one aspect of the value chain at the expense of others. Antois van der Westhuizen, managing director of John Deere Financial, suggests ways to design integrated financing models for smallholders.

Integrated Financing For Smallholder Farmers

Access to adequate financing is often identified as one of the key inhibitors to achieving long-term sustainability for Africa’s agricultural practitioners, particularly smallholder and subsistence-level farmers. These people typically resort to borrowing from community members or pooling resources to make ends meet. There is a real need to unlock financing for smallholder farmers to give them access to mechanisation and other technologies, but it is little use helping them buy tractors when they don’t have money to buy seed and fertiliser. Africa’s farmers require a holistic financing solution that focuses on the entire agricultural value chain.

BEYOND CONVENTIONAL FINANCING

Failure to provide integrated financing models is partly why the traditional reliance on grant funding from government sources or NGOs has not succeeded in creating real agricultural productivity gains on the continent. It has simply been too limited in scope.

Relying on commercial banks to solve the problem also has its limitations, as their regulatory and fiduciary duties require them to adopt a risk mitigation strategy. This, by its very nature, limits the potential scope of clients to larger organisations with established track records. While this makes sound commercial sense, it does not necessarily achieve the broader policy objectives of developing agriculture for food security, job creation and community welfare reasons.

For banks, the risk profile of a commercial farmer is vastly different to that of a smallholder farmer. It makes more sense for them to lend to the end-customer of a group of smallholder farmers than each individual smallholder. For example, if a community of smallholder farmers is growing barley for a brewery, it makes more sense for the bank to lend money to the brewery, which can, in turn, lend money to the smallholders.

HOW CELL PHONES CAN HELP

FLERE HISTORIER FRA Farmer's Weekly

Farmer's Weekly

Farmer's Weekly

Christmas books to charm and delight

During the holiday season, one usually takes a well-earned break from the daily rutt, and there is no better time to catch up on some reading. Patricia McCracken has selected a wide spectrum of titles to tuck into.

time to read

4 mins

December 19-26, 2025

Farmer's Weekly

Farmer's Weekly

From chance to choice: a women's rise to farming success

Many raisin producers assume that retiring without a son to take over the farm means the end of the family business. Alcois Blaauw, this year's winner of the Raisins SA Female Producer Award, proves that assumption to be wrong. Glenneis Kriel reports.

time to read

4 mins

December 19-26, 2025

Farmer's Weekly

Farmer's Weekly

Grandparents below, and kids upstairs!

Dear Jonno,My wife and I want to escape to the countryside.

time to read

1 min

December 19-26, 2025

Farmer's Weekly

Farmer's Weekly

The Unseen Protector

The belief in the Unseen Protector or Unseen Shepherd endured for around 600 years, from the 13th century up until the 19th century. The farmer or his wife would provide a bowl of fresh cream and gruel to appease a spirit, whose blessing was imperative for a good summer harvest and animal health and fertility.

time to read

2 mins

December 19-26, 2025

Farmer's Weekly

THE HITCHING POST

I am a 67-year-old farmer residing on a farm near Harding in KwaZulu-Natal.

time to read

1 mins

December 19-26, 2025

Farmer's Weekly

Pet-friendly family accommodation in the Waterberg

With travel time of only a little over three hours from Johannesburg and 30 minutes from Vaalwater, guests will find Waterberg Cottages in Limpopo. Guests can plan a family-friendly holiday or weekend with plenty of activities to keep everyone occupied on this peaceful 2 500ha private game reserve.

time to read

4 mins

December 19-26, 2025

Farmer's Weekly

Farmer's Weekly

The Shuman legacy continues under the watchful eye of a fifth-generation farmer

Ken Shuman, co-owner of Hilson Shuman Farming, is committed to carrying on his father's towering legacy through innovation and adaptation.

time to read

9 mins

December 19-26, 2025

Farmer's Weekly

Farmer's Weekly

History's most famous musket

The Brown Bess musket was the standard issue firearm for British forces from 1722 to 1838. As Mike Burgess writes, this much-loved weapon contributed significantly to the consolidation of the British Empire that by 1922 was in control of a quarter of the earth's surface.

time to read

4 mins

December 19-26, 2025

Farmer's Weekly

Farmer's Weekly

Muddy soil can cause lameness due to footrot

It is important to clean legs and hooves and check for lameness in horses on a daily basis, especially when there is heavy rain

time to read

2 mins

December 19-26, 2025

Farmer's Weekly

Farmer's Weekly

The role of family farmers in sub- Saharan Africa

As part of the United Nations' recognition of family farming as a vital component of the global agricultural landscape, the decade between 2019 to 1928 was declared the Decade for Family Farming globally. Annelie Coleman compiled this report.

time to read

6 mins

December 19-26, 2025

Translate

Share

-
+

Change font size