Is South Africa spending enough on agricultural research?

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Wandile Sihlobo, Johann Kirsten, 18 November 2024
Technological improvement is a primary catalyst for the growth of the South African agricultural sector. Thus, it is critical that the country continue to spend money on research and development to its long-term growth. However, in recent years, the country seems to be spending less. This is worrying, especially as the sector faces risks such as the consequences of climate change.

Introduction

Joint work by the University of Pretoria and the Agricultural Research Council (ARC) for the international Agricultural Science and Technology Indicators in 2014 estimated that South Africa in that year spent about R2,5 billion on agricultural research – by public, university, and private-sector agencies.

The Department of Agriculture transfers an annual total of R1 billion to the Agricultural Research Council to operate its various programmes to support the agricultural sector. This is roughly 10% of the total budget of the Department of Agriculture (excluding land reform).

But is this sufficient and in line with global norms? We know from previous work that South Africa's agricultural research spend as a share of the budget and value of agricultural output is the highest in Africa, with only Nigeria coming close.

There are, of course, questions about the efficiency of the spending on agricultural research: how much goes to overheads and other non-research expenditures; does the ARC focus on relevant research focus areas and appoint the best scientists, and how well does it maintain its laboratories and experimental farms? This requires detailed studies and evaluation reports to understand whether we are getting value for taxpayers' money.

Recent efforts to increase spending on R&D in agriculture

Over the years, role players in the agricultural industry realized that the funding to the ARC and the delivery of critical technical improvements have been insufficient and slow. Therefore, the various commodity organizations ask: How much do these industry bodies allocate to agricultural research?

From the National Agricultural Marketing Council's 2023 report on Statutory Levies in the agricultural industry, we learned that these organizations use R460 million (or 45%) of the R1,022 billion levy income to fund specific research programmes.

Table 1 below provides a detailed breakdown and comparison of the research spending by the top 12 industries in South African agriculture. These 12 commodities contribute a significant share to South Africa's total gross output value in 2023. Poultry, sugarcane, and maize industries fund their research activity from different sources.

 

Table 1: Research expenditure by the 12 largest commodity groups in South African agriculture

Commodity

Production value 2023

('000)

Levy income

2023 ('000)

LEVY as % of production value

Research spend ('000)

Research spend as % of production value

Research spend as % of levy

Red meat

58 109 307

52 222

0,1%

6 888

0,01%

13%

Citrus

38 922 033

262 925

0,7%

156 148

0,40%

59%

Dairy

27 547 757

61 294

0,2%

3 309

0,01%

5%

Soybeans

23 214 779

86 822

0,4%

68 250

0,29%

79%

Winter cereals

24 912 224

73 244

0,3%

57 230

0,23%

78%

Eggs

13 428 161

     9 265

0,1%

91

0,00%

1%

Table grapes

11 805 000

43 413

0,4%

10 202

0,09%

23%

Potatoes

11 091 251

51 408

0,5%

14 588

0,13%

28%

Pork

10 450 381

51 360

0,5%

1 873

0,02%

4%

Deciduous fruit

10 071 415

168 962

1,7%

86 536

0,86%

51%

Viticulture (wine)

6 287 853

123 741

2,0%

13 289

0,21%

11%

Nuts

6 287 853

65 448

1,0%

35 838

0,57%

55%

Source: NAMC, DoA, and various sources

Note: We could not analyse the research expenditure for maize, poultry, and sugar as this is funded outside the levy proceeds. Grain SA does however provide R11 million funding from their voluntary levy/membership fees to support research in all the grains.

 

Table 1 illustrates some stark realities about how the various commodity organizations focus on research. The R156 million allocation to research by the Citrus Industry via Citrus Research International (CRI) shows the industry's commitment to research.

The growth in the citrus industry in terms of area planted, production efficiency (volume/tree), combatting diseases, and how to deal with the strict demands from export markets have been the backbone of a well-funded, focused, and successful research programme.

This is a substantive research activity implemented mainly by universities and their scientists. The deciduous fruit, table grape, wine, and nut industries follow with similarly designed and funded programmes. Soybeans and wheat industries also spend significant amounts of the levy income on research. The soybean industry has benefited from decades of funding by the Protein Trust as well as from imported technology in seed genetics and cultivation improvements.

More revealing is the column in the table that shows research funding by the industry expressed as a share of total gross value. The deciduous fruit industry spends almost 1% of Gross Value on research, followed by citrus with 0.4%.

It is worrying that the red meat industry allocates only R6,8 million to research – about 0.01% of the industry's total value. Given this industry's many issues and problems, one would expect a much bigger research fund. Just one decent research experiment would take about half of the budget. If one takes the example of citrus fruit and spend at least 0.5% of the value of the industry on research, then there should be about R233 million available for red-meat research. This is substantially more than the current R6,8 million and could stimulate the much-needed growth in the industry.

Conclusion

Overall, we deduce from this data that South Africa needs to review its budget allocations for research and ensure increased spending. Climate change has brought new diseases and various challenges for agriculture. There is also a need for better production methods and breeding programmes, all of which will require careful and well-funded research. This is the responsibility of both the government and the private sector.

 

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