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Agriculture Marketing System

Agriculture Marketing System. Understanding agriculture marketing system Key players involved in agriculture marketing system Interest of these key players? How to reconcile the conflicting interests? “Perform stakeholder analysis”. Agriculture Marketing System. Production sub-system:

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Agriculture Marketing System

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  1. Agriculture Marketing System • Understanding agriculture marketing system • Key players involved in agriculture marketing system • Interest of these key players? • How to reconcile the conflicting interests? • “Perform stakeholder analysis”

  2. Agriculture Marketing System • Production sub-system: - farmers • Distribution sub-system: - traders, wholesalers, retailers, transporters, processors (middlemen) • Consumption sub-system: - consumers • Regulatory sub-system: - Govt. organizations

  3. What is stakeholder analysis? • It is an approach for understanding a system by identifying the key actors or stakeholders in the system, and assessing their respective interests in, or influence on, that system. • Stakeholder analysis is useful for assisting in decision-making situations where various stakeholders have competing interests and stakeholder needs must be appropriately balanced.

  4. When to Use it • Stakeholder analysis may be used at a variety of levels and purposes: • Institution or business - to examine the health of an organization and plan changes • Project or program – to design, steer and monitor a project • Particular decision – to predict the consequences of a decision, and plan to deal with them

  5. Who are Stakeholders • Stakeholders are those who have rights or interests in a system. • Stakeholders are any group or individual who can affect, or is affected by the achievement of the organisation’s purpose. • It includes interested parties as well as affected parties.

  6. Stakeholders • Stakeholders can be individuals, communities, social groups, or organisations. • For example, stakeholders in agriculture marketing policy might include farmers, traders, agri-business firms, processors, support service providers, consumers, and Government agencies

  7. Stakeholder Analysis – Approach • Develop purpose of analysis and initial understanding of the system • Identify key stakeholders • Investigate stakeholders’ interests, characteristics and circumstances • Identify patterns and contexts of interaction between stakeholders • Assess stakeholders’ power and potential roles • Assess options and use the findings to make progress

  8. Characteristics of Stakeholders • Location - rural/urban dwellers • Ownership - landowners/landless, managers, staff, trade unions • Function - producers/consumers, traders/suppliers/competitors, regulators, policy makers, activists, opinion-formers • Scale – small-scale/large-scale, local/international communities • Time - past, present, future generations

  9. Four R in Stakeholder Analysis • Role of each stakeholder in the system • Rights, Responsibility, Revenue (Benefit) and Relationship

  10. Assess Stakeholder Power and Potential • Different degrees of power to control decisions • Different degrees of ‘potential’ to contribute, or ‘importance’, to achieving a particular objective in the system

  11. Power • Stakeholder power can be understood as the extent to which stakeholders are able to persuade or coerce others into making decisions, and following certain courses of action. • Power may derive from the nature of a stakeholder's organization, or their position in relation to other stakeholders.

  12. Potential • Potential to affect, or to be affected by, policies and institutions resides in particular characteristics specific to context and location – such as knowledge and rights. • These stakeholders’ problems, needs and interests are likely to be the most ‘important’ for many initiatives to improve policies and institutions processes.

  13. Stakeholders and their Interests • Farmers: Highest possible returns from the sale of their produce - Maximum price, unlimited quality irrespective of quality • Consumers: Highest food value at the lowest possible price - Low price, limited quantity of high quality

  14. Stakeholders and their Interests • Middlemen: Earn the greatest profit - low purchase price, high quality, high selling price, low cost of operation, reliable supply • Government:Consistent to macro-economic policies - Equitable distribution, food security, natural resource conservation, low pollution, employment, foreign exchange earning • How to reconcile these conflicting interests? – One of the primary task of agriculture marketing system.

  15. Stakeholders and their Interests • Each players think in its own interest having short run perspective • But in the long run, no player can survive without others • Evolve a long run relationship among the players allowing each group to take care of its interest – Is it possible? • Probably yes! Recent strategic partnership models between farmers, government, corporate houses can provide high hopes in Indian context.

  16. Recent Initiatives • Direct purchase from farmers by trading or processing companies (avoiding mandis) • Market Information system • Backward integration of firms • Promoting Farmers Interest Groups • Conducive policy environment by govt. • Partnership between input, output and credit delivery systems • Agriculture exports

  17. Laws and Govt. Policies Domestic and Global Economy Science and Technology Customs and Values • The Food Marketing System : • Firms, organizations • Product flows, distribution channels • Management and Marketing Activities Competition Consumer Tastes and Preferences Infrastructure (transport, communication, education etc.)

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