Policy Brief No. 46. Seeds and subsidies: the political economy of input support programmes in Malawi
Abstract
This FAC Policy Brief examines the political economy of input programmes and identifies maize and input subsidies as central to agricultural political debates. Subsidy programmes that are centred on the supply of seed and fertiliser to support maize production to boost national food security have created a strong actor network including key government players, major donor aid agencies and Non Governmental Organisations (NGOs). In recent years, this has created a unique and highly contested political economy of seeds in Malawi. Notwithstanding the strong narratives about national food security or public food aid, the benefits of both national and donor-led subsidy interventions are unevenly distributed, most to the benefit of elites. Moreover, international commercial seed sector players, pushing their patented genetic material, have won out in agricultural policy over local producers and varieties, again to the profit of local elites.
Citation
Chinsinga, B. Policy Brief No. 46. Seeds and subsidies: the political economy of input support programmes in Malawi. FAC, Brighton, UK (2012) 7 pp.
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