Policy Brief No. 71. Investment in drylands: widening the benefits for food security and development

Abstract

After decades of comparative neglect, the drylands of the Horn of Africa are experiencing an unprecedented surge of investment. Largescale infrastructure projects now dominate national development plans. They represent a welcome renewal of interest by states in drylands and an opportunity to reduce long-standing inequalities in the provision of public goods and services. Uneven investment has been a barrier to formal private sector engagement; it has also left pastoralists more vulnerable to shocks and ill-equipped to take advantage of processes of economic transformation. Of all types of investment, state-driven investment should provide for the greater public good. Careful planning and management will be required if it is to contribute to inclusive growth rather than deepen inequality.

Citation

Birch, I.; Lind, A. Policy Brief No. 71. Investment in drylands: widening the benefits for food security and development. Future Agricultures Consortium Secretariat at the University of Sussex, Brighton, UK (2014) 8 pp.

Policy Brief No. 71. Investment in drylands: widening the benefits for food security and development

Updates to this page

Published 1 January 2014