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Urbanization and the quiet revolution in the midstream of agrifood value chains

In: Handbook on Urban Food Security in the Global South

Author

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  • Thomas Reardon

Abstract

The food security debate has focused largely on the farm sector and on trade. Relatively neglected or ‘hidden’ from mainstream debate are the middle segments (processing, logistics, wholesale) of agrifood value chains in developing countries - and yet this ‘midstream’ forms 30-40 per cent of the value added and costs in food value chains. The productivity of the midstream is as important as farm yields for food security in poor countries. The article shows that over the past several decades the middle segments have transformed quickly and surprisingly - with a huge volume expansion, a proliferation of small and medium enterprises (SMEs), but also concentrating and multinationalizing (in some places and products), with technology change characterized by capital-led intensification, and with the incipient emergence of branding and labelling and packaging, of new organizational arrangements in procurement and marketing interfaces with farmers and retailers, and of private standards and contracts. Economic policies of market and foreign direct investment (FDI) liberalization, commercial and business climate regulations, hard and soft infrastructure investment, and food safety laws, have paved the path to the expansion and shaped the transformation of the important midstream segment of food value chains.

Suggested Citation

  • Thomas Reardon, 2020. "Urbanization and the quiet revolution in the midstream of agrifood value chains," Chapters, in: Jonathan Crush & Bruce Frayne & Gareth Haysom (ed.), Handbook on Urban Food Security in the Global South, chapter 8, pages 145-165, Edward Elgar Publishing.
  • Handle: RePEc:elg:eechap:17352_8
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