Is Agripreneurship The Future For SA's Smallholders?
Farmer's Weekly
|Farmer's Weekly 10 August 2018
‘Agripreneurship’ has become a catchphrase of international agriculture, particularly for largerscale commercial operations. However, Dr Maxwell Mudhara, director of the Farmers’ Support Group at the University of KwaZuluNatal, discusses whether this concept is applicable as a development tool for the world’s smallholder farmers, especially the women and youth of rural South Africa.
South Africa has a dual agricultural economy of smallholder and large-scale commercial farmers. The smallholder farmers are typically family-based, and face a plethora of problems, including limited production resources and know-how, poor infrastructure, lack of produce transport, and limited access to markets. Within South Africa’s smallholder farming sector there is also a failure to supply consistent quantities and quality of agricultural produce. This is especially a result of these farmers’ lack of understanding of accepted marketing practices, such as grading, packaging and branding.
Exacerbating these challenges is government’s dismantling of the country’s agricultural marketing boards in 1996.
This action has meant that these smallholder farmers have to compete against larger-scale commercial farmers and agricultural imports, such as sugar from Brazil.
South Africa’s smallholder farmers are not ready for such competition and, as a result, unemployment and poverty remain dominant socio-economic traits of the country’s rural areas. This is despite the widely held belief that agriculture is the vehicle out of poverty and the driver of economic development. And so, rural-to-urban migration continues.
AGRIPRENEURSHIP TO THE RESCUE?
Agripreneurship encompasses the transformation of an idea or vision into what the Global Entrepreneurship Monitor defines as new business or new venture creation, or the expansion of an existing business by an individual, a team of individuals, or an established business, but specifically along the agricultural value chain.
However, participants in the agripreneurship space need important management and organisational skills if they are to achieve success with their ideas and efforts. These particular skills are commonly lacking among South Africa’s smallholder farmers.
Dit verhaal komt uit de Farmer's Weekly 10 August 2018-editie van Farmer's Weekly.
Abonneer u op Magzter GOLD voor toegang tot duizenden zorgvuldig samengestelde premiumverhalen en meer dan 9000 tijdschriften en kranten.
Bent u al abonnee? Aanmelden
MEER VERHALEN VAN 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.
4 mins
December 19-26, 2025
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.
4 mins
December 19-26, 2025
Farmer's Weekly
Grandparents below, and kids upstairs!
Dear Jonno,My wife and I want to escape to the countryside.
1 min
December 19-26, 2025
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.
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.
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.
4 mins
December 19-26, 2025
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.
9 mins
December 19-26, 2025
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.
4 mins
December 19-26, 2025
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
2 mins
December 19-26, 2025
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.
6 mins
December 19-26, 2025
Translate
Change font size

