Cereal marketing in Mali benefits from mixed system
The Cereal Market Restructuration Programme (PRMC) launched in
Mali five years ago is about to enter its second phase.
The Programme aroused great interest when inaugurated in
1981-82. One of the reasons for this is that Mali was one of the first African
countries to attempt to change its entirely government-controlled cereal
marketing system (in competition, however, with a flourishing black market) to a
mixed system in which the private sector plays an increasingly important role.
Another reason is that it was the first time that a number of bilateral and
multilateral donors (including Belgium, Canada, USA, EEC, France, Federal
Republic of Germany, WFP) had decided to coordinate their measures on an
informal basis.
Under PRMC, the Malian agricultural production agency (OPAM),
which until 1980 had the monopoly of the cereal market, has maintained its task
of supplying the cereal deficient areas and communities (the armed forces,
schools, hospitals, prisons). Moreover, in controlling the market, OPAM is
called upon to maintain farm-gate prices - an official ceiling price is
established after sowing - and to intervene on the market to protect consumers
from excessive price increases connected with seasonal or artificially created
shortages. The Agency is assisted in its task by donors who, with the creation
of PRMC, agreed jointly to provide the equivalent of 50 000 tons of maize per
year. Deposited in a common fund, the proceeds from the sale of these cereals
give OPAM a margin of financial flexibility, thus making it possible to
accomplish its double task.
The numerous analyses and studies of PRMC stress the fact that
notable progress has been made in certain areas. For instance, there has been
great improvement in political relations between Malian government
representatives and the donors who now have consulting functions; also, certain
donors joined the group once the programme got under way. OPAM management has
evolved: the 1 000 employees of 1979 have dropped to fewer than 700 only five
years later, and the operational deficit has been reduced by more than 85 per
cent, from more than 4 billion CFA francs in 1984-85. The more efficient
management of the vehicle fleet and the cereal storage system has also made it
possible to reduce post-harvest losses (12 per cent in 1980) by half, and OPAM
measures have been implemented much more rapidly than before. One of the
consequences of this more functional management is the gradual homogenization of
consumer prices throughout the various regions of the country.
In accordance with the programme's objectives, the marketing of
maize, millet and sorghum was liberalized in the first year, but it was only in
1984-85 that the Malian authorities decided partially to liberalize the
marketing of rice produced in the irrigation districts of the Mopti rice
project. Next year, liberalization should be extended to all domestic
agricultural products. Also, farmgate prices and consumer prices have increased
more slowly than expected. Studies show that despite the rapid increase in the
prices of maize, millet, and sorghum in early 1984 (from CFAF 125 to 165 in six
months), consumer prices, in real terms, dropped between 1981 and 1985. This
government decision to limit the increase in official cereal prices must,
however, be interpreted in the broader context of an IMF financial policy aimed
at reducing me Government's budget deficit. Except for a slight increase in
1982, the salaries of government employees have been frozen since the early
1980s: this measure affects some 60 000 families and is equivalent to a salary
reduction of 5 per cent a year, which, of course, has made it politically
difficult to impose a further increase in cereal prices.
During the three-year drought that has affected the country,
OPAM has revealed itself to be an efficient structure capable of coping not only
with the increasing volume of cereals offered within me framework of the PRMC,
but also with most of the considerable flow of food aid to Mali. The record
harvest of 1985-86 took both OPAM and its donors by surprise: after having tried
to maintain farmgate prices within the limits of its financial resources, OPAM
was suddenly faced with an enormous quantity of cereals, the market price of
which was higher than that asked by private traders who had bought them more
cheaply.
On the eve of the second phase of the PRMC, this has led several
experts to be more flexible in fixing prices so they can be revised during the
season in accordance with the available wholesale and retail stocks, or which
may differ from one region to another. Such measures would perhaps lead to a
reduction in the margin between official consumer prices and private retail
prices which has remained virtually the same throughout the five years
programme. To eliminate the gap created by sending enormous amounts of food aid,
some experts suggest that it would be preferable for donors to provide inputs,
in order to enable OPAM to give more direct support to producers.
Finally, in addition to the real success obtained in the past
five years by this ambitious programme, numerous experts consider that by
applying its present policy the PRMC can neither obtain a real balance between
farmgate and consumer prices, nor guarantee on its own a real step ahead in
agricultural production. To give it a real boost in a country that at one time
was considered the region's cereal storehouse implies making progress in other
sectors of the economy, and particularly in the expansion of small and
middle-sized enterprises, there must also be a real effort to develop
infrastructures, especially roads, which would facilitate trade between the
towns and rural areas. Part of the common counterpart funds of the PRMC could be
used to finance such projects. In this way the programme, which since the
beginning of the decade has gradually taken on a central role in reorienting
agricultural policy, could pave the way for other changes in the country's
economy.
Dani
Blain