The agricultural sector plays a pivotal role in the lives
of people in the Americas, providing food as well as
employment for the population and constituting the
base of our agro industry. In the Caribbean, it is this sector that
must also feed the millions of tourists that visit our shores. In
Latin America and the Caribbean (LAC), some 22,4% of the
population resides in rural communities, compared to 50,8%
in the rest of the world. This underlines the fact that our region
has a higher level of urbanization than the rest of the world,
and emphasizes the need for the modernization of agriculture
through capacity building, to attain higher levels of productivity,
since only a quarter of the population has the responsibility to
feed the entire hemisphere.
Agriculture’s contribution to the Gross Domestic Product
(GDP) in Latin America and the Caribbean in 2007 was 5,2%,
and the sector employed 19% of the population. This mismatch
between the contribution of the sector to GDP and the percentage
of the labour force it employs speaks to the relatively low level
of productivity and translates into lower levels of income in
the agricultural sector compared to the rest of the economy.
Although the scenario in LAC is somewhat better than the
average situation in the world, where agricultural GDP is 4%
and the sector employs 35% of the labour force, this is no cause
for complacency.
The fact is we understimate the value of the sector when we
evaluate its worth and contribution solely in terms of GDP
contribution. When the various linkages between agricultureand the other sectors of the economy are properly evaluated,
agriculture becomes more than food on the table.
Research has shown that growth in the overall economy is
driven largely by growth in the agricultural sector because,
when this sector grows, it reverberates throughout the
economy. On average, a $1,00 increase in agricultural
production generates $2,32 of growth in the overall economy.
This is because increases in agricultural income and production
lead to higher demand for consumer goods as well as for
agricultural supplies and services. It is also the case that growth
in agricultural production generates employment in processing,
distribution and storage activities, in order to handle increased
production volume.
The positive multiplier effect of growth in this sector must be
harnessed through modernization in order to gain stronger
economies in LAC, and improve rural livelihoods. The current
world food prices should also give the region additional
impetus to build local capacity in order to produce more of
the food we consume. This is an imperative, not only from the
standpoint of our farmers benefiting from increased prices for
their products, but also to reverse the high levels of poverty
that characterize rural communities in LAC.
There is therefore an urgent call for the region to deliberately
put in place appropriate measures to build local capacity in the
agricultural sector to enhance production and productivity in
order to increase food security and incomes in the rural areas.
In this regard, for the 2008–2009 Ministerial process and the
Fifth Ministerial Meeting “Agriculture and Rural Life in the
Americas”, we are emphasizing the theme “Building Capacity for
Enhancing Food Security and Rural Life in the Americas”.
This process builds on the two (2) strategic orientations
emphasized in the Fourth Ministerial Meeting held in Guatemala
in 2007:
- to promote with the agricultural stakeholders a broad
based approach to thinking and acting in agriculture
and the rural milieu and,
-“Working together” to improve agriculture and rural life
in the Americas.
These two strategic orientations, increasingly adopted by the
actors of agriculture and rural life in the Americas, offer a
promising way to create a renewed partnership and a national
commitment to the sustainable development of agriculture and
rural milieu, and their reappraisal.
The commitment made by our colleagues and predecessors
for the last 8 years at the Ministerial Process has also been
supported, reflected and mandated by the Heads of State and
Government within the context of the Summit of the Americas
process when they acknowledged the fundamental importance
of agriculture and rural life for the development of countries,
and pledged to undertake actions aimed at bringing about
improvements in both.
This finds its expression in the AGRO 2003-2015 Plan
for Agriculture and Rural Life, which is the centerpiece of
the Ministerial Process “Agriculture and Rural Life in
the Americas.”
The Ministerial Process is a hemispheric effort focusing
on dialogue, consensus building and commitment, and
encompassing a number of objectives and strategic actions the
goal of which is the sustainable development of agriculture and
the rural milieu.
The Ministerial Meeting is the highest level political forum,
within this Process, and the highest level body for reaching
agreement by consensus, in response to the commitments
assumed by the Heads of State and Government in the context
of the Summit of the Americas process.
Following the Ministerial Meeting, the Inter-American Board of
Agriculture (IABA) will hold its XV Regular Meeting. The IABA
is the highest governing body of the Inter-American Institute
for Cooperation on Agriculture (IICA), an inter-american
organization that acts as Secretariat of the Ministerial Process.
In this governing body, the Ministers of Agriculture of the
Americas establish the strategic guidelines needed to ensure that
IICA’s activities support the countries’ efforts to implement the
Hemispheric Ministerial Agreements adopted at the Ministerial
Meetings “Agriculture and Rural Life in the Americas”.
The Government of Jamaica is therefore pleased and honoured
to host these important events and would like to extend a cordial
invitation to all its partners and friends in this process to renew
and reenergize their commitment to work together, with a wide
view of agriculture and rural life, for the reappraising of rural
milieus and the reenergizing of our rural economies.
Dr. The Honourable Christopher Tufton
Minister of Agriculture of Jamaica