9
The case for farmers’ organizations
2.4
IMPORTANCE OF MARKETS TO SMALL-SCALE PRODUCERS
Despite the challenges facing small-scale aquaculture producers in accessing markets
outlined above, it is important to note that improved market access remains very
important for small-scale producers and for rural development in general. Markets can
often seem to be part of the problem rather than part of the solution, and, in the real
world, markets do not function in the perfectly competitive way they are shown to in
neoclassical economic theory. In developing countries, especially in poor rural areas,
markets are often thin (with low volume of trade or a low number of transactions) or
fail completely owing to the high costs and risks of participation. However, avoiding
markets is not a realistic solution for most small-scale producers. With small-scale
producers facing many general challenges (including limited land and capital, dispersed
locations, limited transport and communications infrastructure, poor health and social
and political marginalization), markets have the potential to help them overcome
these challenges by providing income, generating employment and reducing poverty,
empowering small-scale producers and fostering self-reliance, and promoting pro-
poor economic growth through enabling consumption linkages resulting in multiplier
effects on growth (Penrose-Buckley, 2007).
2.5
THE ROLE OF AQUACULTURE FARMERS’ ORGANIZATIONS
Given the challenges facing aquaculture producers outlined in Section 2.3, aquaculture
FOs have an important role to play in the sustainable development of the small-scale
aquaculture sector, including to:
•
enhance participation and consultation of all stakeholders in the planning,
development and management of aquaculture, including the promotion of codes
of practice and BMPs;
• facilitate mechanisms for voluntary self-regulation for attaining best practices
such as the cluster management concept (discussed in Chapter 3);
• promote the appropriate and efficient use of resources, including water, sites, seed,
stock and other inputs;
• develop human resource capacity by facilitating the provision of training,
technology transfer and access to information;
• increase market access through enhanced ability to meet market requirements,
increased negotiation and bargaining power and economies of scale;
• facilitate the provision of extension services, credit and market information;
• develop government communication and consultation processes and promote
comprehensive policies and a supportive legal and institutional framework that
support sustainable aquaculture development; and
• build partnerships with government to progress and implement policies and
programmes, making government efforts and the use of scarce resources more
cost-effective (Hough and Bueno, 2002).
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