The ideal situation. Kenya is largely arid and semi arid. Take time and look at Kenya on google maps (satellite view) and compare with her neighborsWe should be able to grow maize to sustain us , I mean , it’s our staple food !
That’s all considered.The ideal situation. Kenya is largely arid and semi arid. Take time and look at Kenya on google maps (satellite view) and compare with her neighbors
Does Google maps know Kenya more than us?The ideal situation. Kenya is largely arid and semi arid. Take time and look at Kenya on google maps (satellite view) and compare with her neighbors
We're busy decimating arable lands to 50s by 100s
If JSKS can guarantee minimum returns and find a way of lowering production costs, then we are good.
Not necessarily. A well-controlled production/storage/supply chain can guarantee minimum returns to a certain level.guaranteed minimum returns is another word for subsidies. The new admin should come out and tell people the truth. Hakuna pesa and we might struggle for the next 3 years to normalise things
Not necessarily. A well-controlled production/storage/supply chain can guarantee minimum returns to a certain level.
Take the case of milk. Brokers are currently buying from farmers at between 45-50 per liter. Same guys will buy at 25 bb at another time. If industrialization is encouraged such that the excess milk in times of plenty doesn't spoil the market, then the farmer can be guaranteed a fixed figure of 40bob throughout the year, which is profitable.
Same thing with potatoes. Store them and release then during shortages. Maize too. Make the NCPB efficient in taking and off-loading. If a farmer is guaranteed say 4k for every bag, they will produce more, and in return we will never have a situation where we import maize at 6.5k a bag. This has the potential to keep unga prices at below 150 throughout the year, without any subsidies.
Here, we need it because the market isn't really free.It means that the government will be the buyer of the farm produce. Milk, potatoes, coffee, tea, etc.
There was such a debate in Europe in 2020 and the European Commission rejected the farmers' demands invoking market rules and free competition