AgEcon Search

AgEcon Search >
       Agrekon >
          Volume 45, Issue 3, September 2006 >

Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://purl.umn.edu/31740

Title: Re-imagining a future for South African agriculture
Authors: Karaan, Mohammad
Authors (Email): Karaan, Mohammad (asmk@sun.ac.za)
Issue Date: 2006-09
Abstract: Agricultural policy in the past was characterized by elementary objectives such as stabilisation, protectionism, deregulation and producer interests. Future policy direction faces the complexity associated with post-modernism. In this regard, global markets are considered increasingly saturated, unfair, inequitable, volatile, concentrated and dominated by supply chains and retailers. Agricultural firms are moving beyond a producer orientation towards firms that focus on creating value from size, non-farm business, service orientation, more open management style, greater human capital, accelerated self-renewal, innovation, marginalizing commodities, retaining and unlocking further value from traditional business. Furthermore, contemporary issues like land reform and empowerment remain key challenges but suffer from deficiencies in bureaucracy, beneficiary selection, forms of ownership, and generally incentives to engage markets. Empowerment efforts however favour asset acquisition instead of human capital formation and entrepreneurship. Addressing these challenges requires a reconceptualisation of the role of the state and markets. The argument strongly advanced is for greater integration between state and market whereby markets are incentivised to perform and execute economic programmes.
URI: http://purl.umn.edu/31740
Institution/Association: Agrekon>Volume 45, Issue 3, September 2006
Total Pages: 16
Language: English
From Page: 245
To Page: 260
Collections:Volume 45, Issue 3, September 2006

Files in This Item:

File SizeFormat
45020245.pdf195KbPDFView/Open
Recommend this item

All items in AgEcon Search are protected by copyright.

 

 

Brought to you by the University of Minnesota Department of Applied Economics and the University of Minnesota Libraries with cooperation from the Agricultural and Applied Economics Association.

All papers are in Acrobat (.pdf) format. Get Adobe Reader

Contact Us

Powered by: