Enhancing Agro Industry for Productive and Decent Work for Youth and Women in Uganda. The Case for Fish and Cotton Value Chains.

Submitted by on Mon, 10/28/2024 - 13:44

The National Development Plan III (NDP III) identified textiles, apparel, and fisheries as priority sectors for building a resilient, integrated, independent, and self-sufficient economy. However, the plan highlighted a significant gap in textile and fish yields between research stations and actual farms, primarily due to the use of an unskilled labour force in agricultural production.

The Economic Policy Research Centre studied Uganda's fish and cotton value chains, focusing on jobs, skills, technology needs, and investment opportunities. The findings highlight a gender divide, with men dominating the fish industry (99%), while women (60%) are prevalent in cotton, mainly in low-skill roles. In addition, the study explores the extent to which the prevailing environment within each sector is conducive to facilitating the growth of these value chains.

Fish: The study, emphasized three lucrative fish varieties, including Silver fish (mukene), Nile Perch (mpuuta) and Tilapia (ngege). Findings reveal that Lake Victoria alone had the number of fishermen doubling from 34,889 to over 60,000 between 2000 and 2020. Over 99% of persons involved in the fish business (irrespective of fish type) are males (both young and adults) while women are mainly involved in local processing (sun drying, salting and deep frying) of silver fish compared to Nile Perch and Tilapia. Women and youth take part in the Nile Perch and Tilapia processing chain by smoking and salting the bones after removing the fillet.

The Nile Perch (Mpuuta) value chain is more complex, highly industrialised and capital-intensive because of the fish maw. In the Tilapia value chain, the share of men and women engaged in production has grown by 14% between 2014 and 2020, attributed to the uptake of cutting-edge technologies in fish farming (aquaculture). Amongst the various opportunities for investment in the fish value chain are adding value to the fish maw, investing in more quality control measures to ensure and foster standards given that fish is highly perishable and susceptible to toxins if not well handled, manufacturing sustainable fishing gear, like nets, hooks and baits, fishing vessels, fish feeds, cheap processing technology for drying and salting fish, customised cold storage facilities for different fish varieties, at primary and secondary wholesaling and processing level, cold storage equipment and transportation for different modes and invest in domestic fish skin and fish maw trade.

Cotton value chain: The seed cotton production is undertaken by low-skilled family labour, mostly provided by females and youth. Males feature mainly during post-harvest handling, storage, and marketing of seed cotton. One out of every ten middlemen are female. Females dominate the stage of ginning cotton into yarn (value addition), and women dominate (60 percent) in performing manual jobs where no skills are required, like, transportation, offloading, sucking (packing) and weighing, and cleaning. Investment opportunities and hence jobs lie in investments in industrial by-products: cotton lint and cottonseed; oil; soap; and livestock feed - as well as high-end manufacturing products like cotton yarn, garments, and apparel textiles. Hand-looming was explicitly identified as a low-hanging investment opportunity for women and youths. Policy actions are: First, the government should start providing cotton seed to farmers akin to coffee and tea. Second, stakeholders should support the need to revitalise farmer associations and cooperative unions for cotton. These would solve many underlying challenges farmers face around access to credit and determining the inclusive cotton price rather than leaving it to ginners and the CDO who announce the prices.

 

For more detailed information, refer to the main report on the link below:

https://eprcug.org/publication/enhancing-agro-industry-for-productive-an...