FROM THE FARM
Amidst a breakdown in relations between
clerks and their employers, the Irish Banks Standing Committee took the
drastic step of closing banks for six long months in 1970.
At the end of the period, the Central
Bank of Ireland carried out a review. Not only did the Irish economy
continue to function, but the level of economic activity increased over
the period, recounts Felix Martin in Money – The Unauthorised Biography.
Trust was what kept things going. During
the period of closure, cheques or corporate IOU’s were personal, and
sellers did their own risk assessment.
If money is the wheel on which the
modern economy runs, the banking system is the engine. This is why the
health, innovation and versatility of the banking sector can be a key
measure of the strength and potential of an economy. But banks are by no
means the only measure.
In China, the shadow lending industry is
worth a mind-boggling $15 trillion, or 80 per cent of GDP, according to
Bloomberg data. The informal credit sector accounts for 38 per of
African GDP, the IMF reported in 2017.
Would the economy be sustained if the
Irish Bank Crisis happened today? Probably even more so, given the
multitude of alternative systems of exchange, information networks and
distributed ledger systems such as blockchain.
While banks provide important
safeguards, the process leading to bank lending sometimes takes several
months. Worldwide, non-performing credit tend to be lower in the
informal sector because parties within the value chain understand one
another far better than the banks, who are outsiders, hobbled by
inadequate knowledge, paralysed by fear of the known and oftentimes, it
must be said, chastened by arrogance.
Nowhere are banks more neglectful of
their duties than in Africa. Even the Irish Banks Standing Committee
would blush for its modern-day peers on our financially bereft
continent.
Less than three per cent of total bank
lending in Africa goes to agriculture even though farmers account for 70
per cent of all employment and nearly 40 per cent of gross domestic
product, according to the African Development Bank and the International
Center for Tropical Agriculture.
With no indication of this gap shrinking
any time soon, we agriculturalists must find more ways of establishing
our own systems of trust outside the banking system.
Some of this is already happening
through vendor credit financing. Machinery manufacturers and
distributors are finding innovative ways of financing buyers, and
processors and input providers are funding farmers. Any major value
chain participant with a reasonable turnover who is not involved in this
shadow banking activity risks losing long-term competiveness and
growth.
But much more needs to be done if we’re to properly resource our farming community to feed our children.
Like the Irish, we need to create clusters of trust networks among our food and agriculture commodity businesses, processors, consumer groups, farmer cooperatives, mechanisation equipment and service providers, as well as seed, agrochemicals and fertiliser and other input providers. Key to this process is finding ways of enabling safe and innovative use of technology, materials and services to the benefit of consumers and value chain participants.
Like the Irish, we need to create clusters of trust networks among our food and agriculture commodity businesses, processors, consumer groups, farmer cooperatives, mechanisation equipment and service providers, as well as seed, agrochemicals and fertiliser and other input providers. Key to this process is finding ways of enabling safe and innovative use of technology, materials and services to the benefit of consumers and value chain participants.
A farmers’ cooperative, for example, can
work with a food processor that acts as an off-taker in tandem with the
sales and distribution companies closest to the consumer payment point.
The processor’s note supplemented by a small amount of funds activates
mechanisation service providers, who are in turn financed at least
partly by equipment manufacturers. Through mutual understanding of each
other’s services, we can build an ecosystem where the farmers are
collectively guarantying one another’s work as project managers and
system integrators.
The entire structure can be underpinned
by a series of technology based enablers that manage and track climate
risks, logistics, farm management, IOU’s, price movements and other key
indicators to maximise efficiency and minimise risk.
Only once we have such a system tested,
proven and up and running, will our banks do the job they’re supposed to
do. As the Irish-influenced poet Robert Frost wrote, a bank is a place
where they lend you an umbrella in fair weather and ask for it back when
it begins to rain.
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