PREDICTION: The rise of Platforms in tight value chains
As outlined in this report, Platforms are most likely to
appear in sectors where actors are highly fragmented
and significant inefficiencies exist that limit market
interactions. Unsurprisingly, many of the current Platforms
in agriculture have either focused on looser value chains
with relatively large numbers of actors (not only on the
farmer side but also on the side of offtakers) or have taken
a relatively value-chain-agnostic approach (e.g., ag supplies
marketplaces), where the positive transformative potential
of Platforms is relatively high. Many agricultural value
chains, however, are characterized by a relatively high
degree of business consolidation—in particular, vertically
integrated agribusinesses. These businesses often play a
large role in goods and service provision to the smallholder
farmers from whom they source, whether on an impact-
focused or more commercially minded basis.
In these types of value chains, we expect the dynamics of
agricultural Platforms to differ. Platforms are less likely to
add value for agribusinesses by structuring and organizing
commodity transactions (e.g., produce and trading
marketplaces), as these are currently based around vertical
integration and tight relationships between farmers and
offtakers. In fact, agribusinesses might see Platforms as
rivals and, given their relatively high degree of power, might
impede the emergence of Platforms in these value chains.
Given their position, agribusinesses might build on their
existing relationships, knowledge, human capital, and
physical infrastructure to create their own Platform
businesses alongside their core pipeline operations. A
number of agribusinesses are already incorporating digital
solutions into their business (e.g., Cargill CocoaWise). We
hypothesize that a number of such businesses may explore
the Platform option, allowing them to facilitate and oversee
interactions without needing to directly provide all the
goods and services they are currently delivering.
In some cases, tight value chains are closely regulated,
limiting the amount of market-based innovation that Platforms
can offer. For instance, in Ghana, only licensed buying
companies may procure cocoa from farmer organizations;
in Vietnam, only local businesses may purchase coffee from
farmers. Within other value chains, public entities are often
directly involved in marketing activities, setting commodity
prices, and/or providing supplies and services as part of free
or subsidized programs. Here, too, the opportunities for
Platforms to add value are limited .
On the other hand, while many agribusinesses currently
provide a range of goods and services to smallholder
farmers from whom they source (particularly in tight
value chains around export-oriented crops), they often
see their service delivery models as part of the cost of
doing business rather than a core part of it. As such, a
subset of agribusinesses may welcome the emergence of
goods and service-focused Platforms—whether operated
independently or by themselves—as a way for them to focus
on their core business of procurement, processing, and trading
while leaving service delivery to other market actors.
In summary, while relatively few Platforms have emerged
with a specific focus on tight value chains, we can imagine
multiple future scenarios of how such an emergence might
reshape market dynamics in those value chains.
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