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Niger : ASTI-INRAN Fiche d’information 2016

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Lente reconstitution des ressources

Suite à l’achèvement, en 1998, du PNRA financé par la Banque mondiale, la recherche agricole nigérienne a connu plus de 10 ans de crise financière grave. Cependant, grâce au programme PPAAO financé par un prêt de la Banque Mondiale, on note depuis 2009 une reprise graduelle des capacités et investissements consacrés à la recherche agricole. Le PPAAO appuie la recherche zootechnique, de divers projets de renforcement des capacités et la génération, diffusion et adoption de nouvelles techniques.

Auteurs
Gert-Jan Stads, Biba Yacouba et Léa Vicky Magne Domgho
Année
2016
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Publié par
Institut International de Recherche sur les Politiques Alimentaires et Institut National de la Recherche Agronomique du Niger
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Publication cover

Authors:

Gert-Jan Stads, Biba Yacouba, and Léa Vicky Magne Domgho

Year:

2016

Publisher

International Food Policy Research Institute and Niger National Institute of Agricultural Research

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Slow funding recovery

The completion of the World Bank–funded PNRA in 1998 plunged Niger’s agricultural research into severe financial crisis lasting more than a decade. Since 2009, agricultural research capacity and investment levels have gradually begun to recover, in large part due to another World Bank loan–funded project, WAAPP, which is intended to support the country’s livestock research; various capacity building initiatives; and the generation, dissemination, and adoption of new technologies.

Ongoing underinvestment

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Authors:

Nienke Beintema, Katrina Shiningavamwe, Sheehamandje Ipinge, and Sandra Perez

Year:

2016

Publisher

International Food Policy Research Institute

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Volatile spending growth

Namibia’s agricultural research spending was volatile during 2001–2014, mostly due to fluctuations in the government’s contributions to DARD, the country’s main agricultural research agency. In 2014, Namibia invested about 3 percent of its AgGDP in agricultural research, which is not uncommon for arid countries with small populations. After a short period of decline in the early 2000s, the country’s total number of agricultural researchers rose steadily, mostly in response to growth at the Fisheries Department and at UNAM-FANR.

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Authors:

Nienke Beintema and Antonieta Nhamusso

Year:

2016

Publisher

International Food Policy Research Institute and Agricultural Research Institute of Mozambique

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Spending and capacity increase

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Authors:

Nienke Beintema, Sembhoo Chandrabose, and Sandra Perez

Year:

2017

Publisher

International Food Policy Research Institute and Food and Agricultural Research and Extension Institute

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Constant spending levels

Agricultural research in Mauritius is mostly funded by the government, supplemented by limited donor and specific project funding, and revenues from the sale of goods and services. Government funding primarily covers salaries and day-to-day operations. Total agricultural research spending (adjusted for inflation) has fluctuated somewhat over time but remained fairly stagnant during 2000–2014. The country’s intensity ratio is high, reflecting the dominance of sugar research.

Capacity concerns

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Authors:

Léa Vicky Magne Domgho, Souleymane Guèye, and Gert-Jan Stads

Year:

2017

Publisher

International Food Policy Research Institute

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Spending volatility

Compared with many other countries in West Africa, crop and livestock research play a relatively minor role in Mauritania given its arid climate. IMROP, which focuses on fisheries research, accounted for the bulk of the country’s agricultural research spending in 2014. IMROP’s funding, which has fluctuated considerably over time due to the expiration and renewal of various fisheries treaties with the European Union, was the main driver of significant longterm volatility in the country’s total agricultural research investment.

Publication cover

Authors:

Léa Vicky Magne Domgho, Ouleymatou Traoré, and Gert-Jan Stads

Year:

2017

Publisher

International Food Policy Research Institute and Institute of Rural Economics

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Strong donor dependency

Agricultural research in Mali is among the most donordependent in Africa. Strong reliance on short-term projects funded by donors and development banks, combined with modest levels of public funding, have driven significant fluctuations in agricultural research spending over time. Events like the 2012 military coup and unrest in the country’s north—which prompted a temporary freeze on aid—highlight the country’s vulnerability to funding shocks and, hence, its need to diversify its sources of agricultural research funding.

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Authors:

Nienke Beintema, Kondwani Makoko, and Lang Gao

Year:

2016

Publisher

International Food Policy Research Institute and Department of Agricultural Research Services

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Inflation-driven spending decline

Since 2012, Malawi’s agricultural research spending has fallen substantially in inflation-adjusted terms in response to slowing economic growth, caused by a currency devaluation and a suspension of donor aid over corruption allegations. The country’s agricultural research intensity ratio declined as well; in 2014 agricultural research spending as a share of agricultural GDP was 0.53%, its lowest level since 2008.

Funding constraints at DARS

Publication cover

Authors:

Nienke Beintema, Maleoa Mohloboli, and Sandra Perez

Year:

2016

Publisher

International Food Policy Research Institute and Department of Agricultural Research

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Publications

Declining research spending

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