The present state of
Agricultural development will escalate if the strategy for its drives is not repositioned
to be majorly championed by the bottom-top approach whereby the local and state
governments are more responsive to initiating and driving the policies of their
own considering the law of comparative demand advantages before embarking on
production.
For now, the present
agricultural development progress towards food security can be largely
attributed to the Federal Government policy most of the time, and upon this,
the achievement recorded cannot be equated to what is being obtained when the regional
approach to agricultural development are fully deployed with cocoa synonymous
to the Western region, groundnut to the North and palm oil to the East with
maximum local and export earnings to the nation’s economic development. However
if this tempo has been maintained, most of the arguments put up in defense to
the present arrangement of agricultural development may have not scored any
point as each states and local government would have developed a standard model
capable of checkmating any challenge with more financial investment in the
sector.
The present
arrangement where the Federal Government is always taking the lead in any
agricultural programme of the entire nation may not be realistic to create the
anticipated result of job creation and food security as often times diverse policies between the tripartite
stakeholders is always at the detriment of rural farmers.
It is obvious that
agriculture is expected to be run in a concurrent manner whereby the sector
will be funded both by the local, states and federal government, but most of
the time the overcrowded dominance appearance of the apex government always
make some of the states and local
government shack in the their responsibilities to agricultural development.
In the face of the
dwindling oil price in the world market, Nigerians especially at the local and
states’ levels should begin to ask questions on how budget meant for
agricultural development are spent through their policy templates as doing this
will ensure more positive impact on the sector in the lives of people
especially at the rural areas.
At the last year
local government official meeting held in Abuja, the officials complained about
the total neglect of the sector despite the much contribution of the federal
government through the Agricultural Transformation Agenda (ATA) saying nothing
is happening at the local governments where the impact supposed to have been
properly felt as more importantly most of them do not have a defined policy
direction of their own for agricultural development thereby making it difficult
to do any tangible things in this regards.
In our bid to ensure
maximum food security, the state and local government authorities must be ready
to embark on comprehensive agricultural programme of production, processing and
global marketing thereby reducing the overcrowded responsibility of the federation government
to food security being well complimented by the other arms of governments in a
comparative advantageous ways.