ABS
Staff
Land still equals wealth, and in an
increasingly cautious investing climate, many are turning to an old philosophy
to put their money to work. New York’s Waldorf-Astoria Hotel played host to a
conference on global agriculture investments. The event was organized by
HighQuest Partners, whose managing director, Philippe de Laperouse, explained
that with the demand for food increasing globally, and its future sources undetermined,
investors are looking to move in on agriculture.
The center of this movement currently lies in
Africa, where land and fresh water remain plentiful. “Africa has a tremendous
future in terms of agriculture. Africa could feed much of the world,” Jes Tarp,
CEO of Aslan Global Management, told NPR.
Mozambique, a southern African country
approximately the size of Texas, is one of the hot spots for agricultural
investments. Within the country, all of the land is owned by the government.
Investors can lease the land for 50- or 100-year terms, for an extremely low
price. Needless to say, the scenario benefits investors in the extreme long
term.
For the country’s impoverished citizens,
however, increased corporate presence can mean the loss of livelihood. Though
the land is government-owned, Mozambique is home to a large number of farmers,
who work on the land to make ends meet. When land is sold to investors, it can
mean the displacement of established farms and workers, if the company decides
to work differently. Schools, villages and medical clinics can become
compromised when the ground they’re built on is transferred into foreign
control.
In some villages, companies that gain control
of the land will simply plow over the crops of the local farmers. Such was the
case in the small village of Ruasse, where Hoyo-Hoyo Agribusiness paved over
the local crops in favor of their own plantations and use the water with little
care for the villagers, who rely on it to drink. Instead, the water is carried
away in large tanks to feed a potato field.
“This whole community has just one river;
this one here,” said one of the villagers. “By the month of August, this river
will be all dry.”
Though some companies develop larger
corporate farms to employ the Mozambique natives, there is little long-term
support and government protection against foreign abuse is non-existent.
Agricultural investments are becoming more and more popular in other countries
like Ethiopia and Tanzania as well, and Africa’s importance in the global economy
could be on the rise. However, these countries must take precautions in order
to protect the interests of their own people and secure their own future.
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