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Food Value Chains: Creating Health & Wealth for All

Food Value Chains: Creating Health & Wealth for All. Ithaca, April 17, 2013 Shanna Ratner Yellow Wood Associates. What is a Food System?. The whole array of activities involved in producing and distributing food * Can be local, regional, national, international.

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Food Value Chains: Creating Health & Wealth for All

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  1. Food Value Chains: Creating Health & Wealth for All Ithaca, April 17, 2013 Shanna Ratner Yellow Wood Associates

  2. What is a Food System? The whole array of activities involved in producing and distributing food* Can be local, regional, national, international. One component of the agricultural economy *Statz, John, Strategic Pathways and Interactions to Cutting Hunger in Half in Africa, 2000. http://aec.msu.edu/fs2/africanhunger/strategicpaths.pdf

  3. Potential Benefits of a Fully-Realized Food System Healthy fresh and processed products Access to healthy food for all Healthy natural environment Improved health outcomes Ecosystem services and cost avoidance Fiscal health through open space Employment opportunities Entrepreneurial opportunities

  4. How are benefits realized? Through relationships between and among players who act out of self-interest to achieve shared benefits. Suppliers Producers Processors Buyers Consumers Supporters

  5. Roles in a Food System Transactional players provide inputs, produce food, process and distribute food in response to market demand. Support system players create the rules for transactional players and contribute to (or limit) their capacity to respond to market demand.

  6. Generic Wealth Creation Value Chain

  7. Which roles do You play in the food system? Health and public health providers Government representatives Farmers Educators Food or food-related business Researchers Volunteers CONSUMERS!!! And more…

  8. Two Key Components of a Wealth Creation Approach to Food Systems WealthWorks Value Chains Broad Definitions of Wealth

  9. Where are we working on the ground? WealthWorks Value chain grants in: Central Appalachia Energy efficient housing construction, energy efficiency retrofits, renewables, food, forestry Alabama Black Belt and Mid-South Renewable energy, social impact investment, forestry, food, Community Based Tourism (CBT) Lower Rio Grande Valley region in Texas Green housing/neighborhoods

  10. What do we mean by a “WealthWorks Value Chain?” a business model based on shared economic, social, and environmental values, in which buyers, processors, producers and others work together to create value in response to market demand while building community wealth.

  11. WealthWorks Value Chains vs. Supply Chains • WealthWorks Value Chain • Chain starts with consumer demand • Measured by wealthcreated/ retained • Everyone is in it together • Intentionally balances mutual benefit of all in chain • All known costs are considered and addressed • Tries to influence policy to level the playing field and maximize long-term and widely shared wealth • Traditional Supply Chain • Chain starts with producer supply • Measured by net income produced • Everyone is in it for him/herself • Power determines who gets paid how much for their role • Participants try to pass on costs to others within or outside of chain • Tries to influence policy to create advantage and maximize short-term income

  12. The Wealth Creation Approach Results Individual Capital Interventions Interventions Social Capital Intellectual Capital Supply Chain Value Chain Natural Capital Interventions Interventions Built Capital Financial Capital Political Capital Based on a diagram created by Justin Maxson of MACED

  13. Seven Forms of Community Wealth Intellectual capital is the stock of knowledge, innovation, and creativity or imagination in a region. Social capital is the stock of trust, relationships, and networks that support civil society. Individual Capital is the stock of skills and physical and mental healthiness of people in a region.

  14. Seven Forms of Community Wealth (cont.) Natural capital is the stock of unimpaired environmental assets (e.g. air, water, land, flora, fauna, etc.) in a region. Built capital is the stock of fully functioning constructed infrastructure.

  15. Seven Forms of Community Wealth Financial capital is the stock of unencumbered monetary assets invested in other forms of capital or financial instruments. Political capital is the stock of power and goodwill held by individuals, groups, and/or organizations that can be held, spent or shared to achieve desired ends. A wealth creation approach intentionally creates seven forms of wealth without undermining any one to build another.

  16. “Income” or earnings from investments in wealth take many forms Individual capital: psychic and physical energy for productive engagement and capacity to use and apply existing knowledge and internalize new knowledge to increase productivity. Social capital: improved health outcomes, educational outcomes, and reduced transaction costs, among others Intellectual capital:inventions, new discoveries, new knowledge, and new ways of seeing. Natural Capital: a sustainable supply of raw materials and environmental services.

  17. WEALTH INCOME EXPENSE The difference between wealth and income Most projects focus on income (a flow) instead of on building wealth (a stock).

  18. A wealth matrix for planning and evaluation

  19. Wealth and Sustainable Livelihoods We need enough of every form of wealth so that we can: Benefit directly from a portion of the “income” it produces (improve quality of life), and REINVEST the remainder of the “income” to sustain and grow the stocks of wealth over time.

  20. Wealth and Sustainable Livelihoods All wealth depreciates over time. Only by continually re-investing in all the forms of wealth are we able to: increase the quality of life for present generations and the sustainability of livelihoods for us and future generations.

  21. Selected Gaps in Your Regional Food System Many discrete efforts that are not coordinated as a system tied to market demand at scale Lack of information and mechanisms for sharing information among discrete efforts Weak ties to specific types of support for financing, research, market expansion, new product development, policy changes, etc.

  22. Challenge: How Can We Address the Gaps while Building Wealth? Table Exercise #1: Who is at your Table? Table Exercise #2: Building Multiple Forms of Wealth through Food Systems

  23. Table Exercise #1 Table Exercise #1: Who is at your Table? You will have 5-10 minutes to engage in this exercise at your table. Get as far as you can. This exercise asks you to: Introduce yourself and explain the role(s) you play in the food system. As a group, choose a food system gap to discuss Discuss the type(s) of wealth you/your organizations create and the benefits to you or your organization of closing the food system gap you have selected.

  24. Table Exercise #2 Table Exercise #2: Building Multiple Forms of Wealth through Food Systems You will have 15-20 minutes to engage in this exercise at your table. Get as far as you can. This exercise builds on Table Exercise #1 - continue to focus on the same gap in the system that you identified in Table Exercise #1. In this exercise you will: Brainstorm interventions to close the gap you have identified Choose an intervention to focus on Plan how you can carry out that intervention in a way that creates multiple forms of wealth, and Report to the group about your plan.

  25. Contact Information Shanna Ratner Yellow Wood Associates 802-524-6141, shanna@yellowwood.org Wealth Creation and Rural Livelihoods National Community of Practice http://www.ruralwealth.org

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