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Abstract
Millions of small farmers are reached commercially
every day as they buy seeds and crop
protection products, fertiliser, cell phones, machinery
and tools, taking advantage of the science
and research embodied in these products. The
market for agricultural inputs is large, and the role
of the private sector as a purveyor of technology
and services is growing. It is in the nature of the
private sector to bring products to the market and
deliver value, including to small farmers. But the
private sector goes where there is a commercial
incentive. Farmers who are too poor to purchase
inputs are not helped, and the technologies they
need may not get developed. This is a public
policy and societal challenge that cannot be
solved by the public or the private sector alone.
The solution requires the creative complementarities
of public–private cooperation that — in
addition to the farm population — must include the
‘third’ or not-for-profit sector (foundations, NGOs,
civil society). This pathway can develop and
deliver solutions to large numbers of small farmers.