President Ruto assures coffee farmers that the government will address challenges facing the sector
- Published By Jedida Barasa For The Statesman Digital
- 1 year ago
President William Ruto yesterday said that 72 coffee factories are earmarked for upgrading and assured farmers the Government is addressing challenges that have continually crippled the sector.
Ruto said the factories are under the Coffee Revitalization Programme (CRP) and farmers will be provided with seedlings and fertilizer at subsidized prices.
The aim, he said, is to increase productivity from two kilogrammes per tree to 10 kilogrammes and raise production from 50,000 metric tons to 102,000 metric tons annually by 2027.
“I want to assure all farmers, let me be specific about coffee, I know there are challenges in the coffee sector and I have taken a keen interest. My deputy is seized with that matter and i want to assure our farmers that the Government will do whatever it takes to ensure they do not suffer the consequences of what we have seen in the past, where a few people benefit and the rest of the farming fraternity are in poverty,” said Ruto, when he opened the 2023 Agricultural Society of Kenya (ASK) Nairobi International trade fair.
The President also assured coffee farmers that the Government will work with all stakeholders to ensure wastage, inefficiency, corruption and other malpractices are eliminated, insisting that they must get a good return for their crop.
Ruto said interventions to transform agriculture are foundational to the successful implementation of the Bottom-Up Economic Transformation Agenda (Beta).
One of the drivers of the high cost of living and high levels of poverty, especially in rural areas, he said, is that agricultural productivity has stagnated even as population rises.
Similarly, the food production more often than not falls far below demand and the importation of food increases trade deficit and increases food prices and given that food constitutes 54 per cent of household expenditure, agricultural productivity is a high priority.
Ruto said agriculture employs 70 per cent of the population and low productivity contributes to low earnings in the sector, which in turn undermines the capacity of households to withstand the cost of living, deepening poverty.
Similarly, agriculture contributes 25 per cent of Gross Domestic Product (GDP) directly and another 25 per cent indirectly.
“Low productivity, responsible for deficits in essential agricultural produce, is responsible for high importation, which depletes our foreign exchange and deepens the negative trade balance, worsening the economic situation,” he stated.
Ruto stated that very few sectors of the economy have endured as much shock and stress as agriculture on account of extreme weather events, erratic climate and other adverse impacts of climate change.
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