IFAD asks world leaders to increase wages for rural small-scale farmers

Inadequate income is the main reason people can’t afford healthy diets

4929
IFAD calls to world leaders for increasing wages of rural small-scale farmers
IFAD calls to world leaders for increasing wages of rural small-scale farmers

It is an outrage that rural small-scale farmers in developing countries, who grow a third of our global food, are paid a pittance for their work, said the president of the International Fund for Agricultural Development (IFAD), who asked world leaders attending the UN Food Systems Summit to take concrete actions to change this. 

“It is a terrible irony that those who grow our food cannot afford to feed their own families healthy, nutritious diets,” said Gilbert F. Houngbo, president of IFAD. “With no savings and no access to capital, farming families also have no cushion against climate change and other shocks. Today’s Food Systems Summit is our chance to commit to concrete changes. We mustn’t squander this opportunity.”  

The majority of rural people in developing countries earn their incomes from agriculture. Rural small-scale farmers working on farms smaller than two hectares produce over 30 percent of global food and up to 80 percent in parts of Africa and Asia. According to a recent study of a number of crops sourced from small-scale farms in developing countries, only 6.5 percent of the supermarket price is paid to the farmer. Traders, food manufacturers, and retailers take the lion’s share. 

According to IFAD’s rural development report released earlier this week, the growing concentration of power within food systems has seen profits for large food companies escalate, while the people working to produce, process, and distribute our food are trapped in poverty and hunger. Inadequate incomes are a major reason why around 3 billion people in the world cannot afford healthy diets. 

“When rural people are paid fairly for their labor, the ripple effect is enormous. Profitable small farms put children through school, pay for diverse, healthy diets, generate employment, and boost rural economies,” said Houngbo. “Conversely, poverty and hunger are key drivers of migration, conflict, and instability. Which future do we want?”

IFAD to improve the conditions for small-scale farmers

IFAD is calling for governments to work with the private sector to implement policies that promote employment generation, decent wages, and improved working conditions. A major focus needs to be on local small businesses which work across our food systems and produce, process, and distribute food while creating local jobs and boosting rural economies. In particular, all actors need to commit to ensure small-scale producers can access existing and emerging markets on fair terms.

Today’s Food Systems Summit, under the leadership of UN secretary-general António Guterres, is intended to result in actionable commitments from heads of state and other leaders. It is a culmination of 18 months of engagement with governments, food producers, civil society, and companies on how to transform the way we produce, process, and consume food. 

IFAD invests in remote rural people, particularly in women, youth, and indigenous people who suffer the most from inequitable food systems, to ensure they receive decent returns for their work. IFAD has been the anchor agency for the Food Systems Summit action track focused on advancing equitable livelihoods. Following the Summit, IFAD will co-lead the decent wages and living income coalition with the International Labour Organization (ILO) and the support of CARE to advance this important element of food systems transformation.

IFAD is also leading an initiative to unlock the potential of public development banks worldwide to address the lack of access to finance for rural producers while helping to shift investments to more environmentally sustainable and fairer systems. 

Countries are in the process of developing their own pathways, and IFAD will continue to support its member states in transforming their national food systems.  

 

IndiFoodBev — authentic, impactful and influential

An English-language food and beverage processing and packaging industry B2B platform in print and web, IndiFoodBev is in its third year of publication. It is said that the Indian food and beverage industries represent approximately US$ 900 billion in revenues which implies more than 20% of the country’s GDP. Eliminating the wastage on the farmside can help to deliver more protein to a higher number of the population apart from generating sizable exports. The savings in soil, seeds, water, fertilizer, energy and ultimately food and nutrition could be the most immense contribution that country is poised to make to the moderation of climate change.

To improve your marketing and grow sales to the food and beverage processing and packaging industry, talk to us. Our research and consulting company IppStar [www.ippstar.org] can assess your potential and addressable markets in light of the competition. We can discuss marketing, communication, and sales strategies for market entry and growth.

Suppliers and service providers with a strategy and budget for targeted marketing can discuss using our hybrid print, web, video, and social media channels to create brand recognition linked to market relevance. Our technical writers are ready to meet you and your customers for content.

The second largest producer of fruit and vegetables in the world is continuously expanding processing capacities and delivery systems with appropriate innovative technologies. We cover product and consumer trends, nutrition, processing, research, equipment and packaging from farm to thali. Get our 2025 media kit and recalibrate your role in this dynamic market. Enhance your visibility and relevance to existing markets and turn potential customers into conversations. Ask for a sample copy of our bi-monthly in print or our weekly IndiFoodBev eZine each Wednesday.

For editorial info@ippgroup.in — for advertisement ads1@ippgroup.in and for subscriptions subscription@ippgroup.in

Naresh Khanna – 10 February 2025

Subscribe Now

LEAVE A REPLY

Please enter your comment!
Please enter your name here